Belarus president re-elected

Belarus President Alexander Lukashenko was officially declared the winner on Friday of a fourth term in office.

Belarus President Alexander Lukashenko was officially declared the winner on Friday of a fourth term in office in a vote that both his challengers and international monitors say was tainted by fraud.

The Central Election Commission said Lukashenko won 79.6 per cent of Sunday's vote, while his nearest challenger, Andrei Sannikov, got 2.4 per cent.

Representatives of the opposition candidates, who attended the commission's session, rejected the official results. Sannikov's representative, Yuri Khadyko, urged the election agency to void the vote because of fraud and call a new one. The commission ignored the demand.

Sannikov was among those beaten by club-wielding riot police that tried to disperse 10,000 demonstrators protesting voting fraud. He and his wife, a prominent journalist, have both been jailed. Authorities tried to take Sannikov's three-year-old son and put him into an orphanage but his grandmother went into hiding with the boy, the Vyasna rights centre said on Friday.

International observers and Western governments have accused Lukashenko of using fraudulent counting and violence against opposition protesters to keep himself in power.

"A monstrous system of falsification has been created in this country, and you are all accomplices of that," Ales Lagvinets, representing another opposition candidate, Grigory Kostusev, told the commission.

Seven of the nine candidates challenging Lukashenko were arrested after the vote .

One of them, Vladimir Neklyayev, was badly beaten during the rally, which protested the election results. His wife said on Friday that she and his lawyer have been denied access to Neklyayev in an effort to conceal the extent of his injuries.

"This is the lawlessness of authorities that are afraid to show the horrible condition my husband is in," Olga Neklyayeva said.

Lukashenko, 56, has run a repressive regime since 1994. Often called Europe's last dictator, he allows no independent broadcast media, keeps 80 percent of the country's industry under Soviet-style state control and suppresses opposition with police raids and pressure.

Russia has provided Belarus with cheap oil and gas, a policy that keeps the former Soviet republic of 10 million bordering Poland, Ukraine and the Baltic nations within its sphere of influence.


Share

2 min read

Published

Updated

Source: AAP



Share this with family and friends


Get SBS News daily and direct to your Inbox

Sign up now for the latest news from Australia and around the world direct to your inbox.

By subscribing, you agree to SBS’s terms of service and privacy policy including receiving email updates from SBS.

Download our apps
SBS News
SBS Audio
SBS On Demand

Listen to our podcasts
An overview of the day's top stories from SBS News
Interviews and feature reports from SBS News
Your daily ten minute finance and business news wrap with SBS Finance Editor Ricardo Gonçalves.
A daily five minute news wrap for English learners and people with disability
Get the latest with our News podcasts on your favourite podcast apps.

Watch on SBS
SBS World News

SBS World News

Take a global view with Australia's most comprehensive world news service
Watch the latest news videos from Australia and across the world