Belarus leader accuses West of using plane incident to try to undermine him

Belarusian President Alexander Lukashenko on Wednesday accused the West of trying to use the diversion of a Ryanair plane at the weekend to wage hybrid war against him and said it had falsely portrayed his handling of the incident.

In his first comments after what some European politicians described as a “state-sponsored hijacking” on Sunday, Lukashenko said he had acted legally and in accordance with all international norms, but that ‘ill-wishers’ were trying to use the plane episode to try to undermine his rule.

“As we predicted our ill-wishers from outside the country and from inside the country changed their methods of attack on the state,”

Lukashenko told parliament. “They (the ill-wishers) have crossed many red lines and have abandoned common sense and human morals.”

Airlines re-routed flights to avoid Belarus’s airspace on Tuesday and Belarusian planes faced a possible ban from Europe, as international outrage mounted over Minsk forcing down a jetliner and arresting a dissident journalist on board.

Belarusian air control advised the Ryanair flight from Athens to Vilnius to divert to Minsk,

according to a transcript, due to what turned out to be a hoax bomb threat. Belarus also scrambled a MiG-29 fighter jet to escort the passenger plane.

Belarusian authorities then swiftly detained Roman Protasevich, a dissident journalist who had been travelling on board the plane, along with his girlfriend. Both face criminal charges. Lukashenko, according to Russia’s TASS news agency, said

Protasevich had planned a “bloody rebellion” in Belarus.

The Western response to the plane diversion was part of a “hybrid war” against his country and he would respond harshly to any sanctions or provocations, the Belta news agency reported him as telling parliament.

Mass protests erupted against President Alexander Lukashenko last summer after he declared victory in a presidential election that his opponents said was rigged, but they lost momentum amid a sweeping crackdown by the authorities.

Exiled opposition leader Sviatlana Tsikhanouskaya said on Wednesday the opposition was preparing to stage a new phase of active anti-government protests in Belarus.

Source: Reuters

One comment

  1. Had it been a legitimate bomb threat protocol states that the plane would have been diverted to the nearest airport, namely Vilnius. The diversion route to Minsk in which the plane was forced to take shows it was not closer than the flight path already planned to Vilnius. Best he tries to explain that instead of whinging about the West. But of course he couldn’t care less ……..

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