World

Belarus activists jailed, country's supreme court rejects election appeal

Belarus jailed two opposition leaders for 10 days on Tuesday as the government pursued a crackdown on the few figures still at large, while schoolteachers led a new protest of thousands against President Alexander Lukashenko.

Olga Kovalkova and Sergei Dylevsky, leading figures in protests, jailed for 10 days

People flash lights from their phones during an opposition demonstration to protest against the recent presidential election results on Tuesday evening at the Independence Square in Minsk. (Vasily Fedosenko/Reuters)

Belarus jailed two opposition leaders for 10 days on Tuesday as the government pursued a crackdown on the few figures still at large, while schoolteachers led a new protest of thousands against President Alexander Lukashenko.

Despite most major opposition figures being in jail or exile, Lukashenko has so far failed to put down protests against his 26-year-old rule, more than two weeks after an election his opponents say was rigged.

Olga Kovalkova and Sergei Dylevsky were brought to separate courts where they were each jailed for 10 days. Kovalkova is the main representative of opposition candidate Svetlana Tikhanovskaya, and Dylevsky has led strikes at Minsk's flagship tractor factory.

Both are senior figures in an opposition Coordination Council, set up last week with the self-described aim of negotiating with the authorities. They were arrested on Monday.

Lukashenko has accused the new council of attempting to seize power, and prosecutors have launched a criminal case.

The coffin of Nikita Krivtsov is carried as a friend holds his portrait Tuesday at a funeral in Molodechno, 70 kilometres northwest of Minsk. Krivtsov went missing on Aug. 12 after taking part in protests and his body was found 10 days later. (Dmitri Lovetsky/The Associated Press)

At the latest protest, thousands gathered at the ministry of education to demonstrate against a threat by Lukashenko to fire schoolteachers who do not support his government. Rallies have typically attracted thousands during the week, swelling to tens of thousands on weekends.

"I have come so that teachers are not afraid, so that their voice can be heard, so that they can work even if they have a different view from the authorities," said a literature teacher who gave her name as Svetlana.

Lukashenko defiant despite unrest

Lukashenko has denied election cheating. He has called the protesters "rats" and says they are funded from abroad.

His posturing has grown steadily more confrontational: In recent days he has been pictured on state television with a Kalashnikov rifle and tactical vest. Yet so far, a long-standing threat of a decisive police operation to clear the streets has yet to materialize.

Another opposition council member, Pavel Latushko, a former culture minister and head of the main state drama theater, was questioned by investigators on Tuesday but not arrested. He emerged saying he would go back to work and the council's activities were not illegal.

The 2015 Nobel Prize-winning Belarusian author Svetlana Alexievich, seen at the 29th International Book Fair in Bogota, Colombia, in April 2016, has reportedly been summoned for questioning. (John Vizcaino/Reuters)

The council includes dozens of figures representing broad swathes of society. Nobel Prize-winning author Svetlana Alexievich has been summoned for questioning on Wednesday.

"The intimidation will not work. We will not relent," opposition candidate Tikhanovskaya said in a video link with the European Parliament. "We demand all political prisoners freed. We demand to stop the violence and intimidation by the authorities."

The Belarus Supreme Court on Tuesday rejected Tikhanovskaya's appeal to annul the election results.

Lukashenko won a sixth term with 80 per cent of the vote in an election without international monitors. The result has been seen as implausible given the crowds Tikhanovskaya was drawing during the campaign.

Tikhanovskaya, 37, fled to Lithuania after the election. A political novice, she emerged as the consensus opposition candidate after better-known figures were barred from standing, including her jailed activist husband.

Economic woes

Belarus is the closest ally to Russia of all former Soviet republics, and Lukashenko's fate is widely seen as in the hands of the Kremlin, which must decide whether to stick with him as his authority has ebbed.

Despite being seen in Moscow as a truculent and erratic ally, Lukashenko still seems to have the backing of Russia, which sent journalists to staff Belarus state TV after employees quit in protest against what they described as orders to broadcast propaganda.

WATCH l Armed Lukashenko disdains protesters:

Belarus president stages machine gun photo-op amid massive protests

4 years ago
Duration 2:04
As thousands of people have flooded the streets of Belarus to protest the recent election, President Alexander Lukashenko flew over the crowd in a helicopter and emerged holding a machine gun.

On Tuesday, Russia said that during talks between Foreign Minister Sergei Lavrov and U.S. Deputy Secretary of State Stephen Biegun, it had stressed there should be no attempt by the United States and European Union to "pressure" Belarus, including via sanctions.

Biegun was in Moscow after meeting Tikhanovskaya on Monday in Lithuania.

The West has had to balance its sympathy for a nascent Belarusian pro-democracy movement with its concern that strong support would trigger a Russian-backed crackdown.

Meanwhile the crisis is threatening the finances of the country as foreign currency reserves shrink and the currency weakens.

The Belarusian rouble is at a record low against the euro and is approaching an all-time trough versus the dollar as Belarusians queue at exchange points to buy hard currency.