1. Introduction
1. On 19 December 2010, presidential elections took
place in Belarus. Mr Alexander Lukashenko was officially re-elected
for a fourth term with nearly 80% of the votes.
2. The announcement of the election results was followed by violent
confrontations in the capital, Minsk, between the security forces
and thousands of opposition demonstrators protesting about alleged
vote rigging. The violent repression of the political protest in
the aftermath of the presidential election and the repressive measures
taken by the authorities on opposition demonstrators, including
former presidential candidates, human rights defenders and journalists,
have given rise to strong reactions and criticism from the international community.
3. These confrontations, inter alia,
prompted the tabling of a request to hold a debate under urgent procedure
on “The situation in Belarus in the aftermath of the presidential
election” during the January 2011 part-session of the Parliamentary
Assembly. The Political Affairs Committee was seized for report
by the Assembly and confirmed me as rapporteur. The Committee on
Legal Affairs and Human Rights was seized for opinion and appointed
Mr Christos Pourgourides as rapporteur.
4. Although the present report is presented to the Assembly under
an urgent procedure, it is worth noting that I have been following
the situation in Belarus since January 2008 when I was appointed
chairperson of the then sub-committee on Belarus.
5. In fact, the Political Affairs Committee has been following
closely, and on a regular basis, the situation in Belarus since
the adoption of Resolution 1727 (2010) on the situation in Belarus:
recent developments, in April 2010, when the Assembly decided to
put on hold its activities involving high-level contacts between
itself and the Belarusian authorities. The resolution was adopted
following a debate under urgent procedure prompted by the execution
of two prisoners in March 2010, as well as incidents of harassment
of members of the Polish minority and infringements of their rights
and the fact that local elections were held in the country in the
complete absence of any international observers.
6. In reaffirming its readiness to engage in a progressive dialogue
with the Belarusian authorities in response to positive developments,
the Assembly underscored that there cannot be progress on dialogue without
progress towards Council of Europe standards and a clear political
commitment by the Belarusian authorities to embrace Council of Europe
values, confirmed by consistent actions.
7. When interpreting this resolution, the Bureau of the Assembly
considered that “high-level contacts” meant “members of the Bureau”.
However, upon the request of the Political Affairs Committee and
with a view to verifying the situation on the ground prior to the
2010 presidential election, the Bureau, at its meeting in Skopje
on 20 May 2010, authorised me to visit Belarus in my capacity as
rapporteur of the Political Affairs Committee on the situation in
Belarus.
8. During my visit to Minsk, from 22 to 25 August 2010, I met
a broad range of interlocutors with a view to gathering information
for my report. At its meeting on 6 October 2010, the Political Affairs
Committee, after being informed of the main findings of my visit,
held an exchange of views on the situation in Belarus and, in particular,
the preparations for the elections, with the participation of Mr
Thomas Markert, Secretary of the Venice Commission, Mr Nikolai Samoseiko,
Chairperson of the Standing Committee on Legislation and Judicial
and Legal Matters of the House of Representatives of the Republic
of Belarus and Head of the parliamentary ad hoc group on capital
punishment matters, and Mr Aleh Hulak, President of the Belarusian Helsinki
Committee.
9. The Political Affairs Committee held a further exchange of
views on the forthcoming presidential election at its meeting on
18 November 2010, with Mr Evgeni Smirnov, Chairperson of the Standing
Commission on Legislation and Public Management of the Council of
the Republic of the National Assembly of the Republic of Belarus
and Deputy Head of the National Assembly Delegation for Relations
with the Parliamentary Assembly, Mr Vital Rymasheuski, Co-Chairperson
of the Belarusian Christian Democracy, Mr Andrei Babok, special correspondent
of the Department of international co-operation at the “Narodnaya
Gazeta”, and Mr Andrei Aliaksandrau, Vice-Chairperson of the Belarusian
Association of Journalists. On that occasion, I presented an information
note on my visit to Minsk in August 2010, which the committee decided
to make public.
10. In Brussels, on 9 December 2010, I met Mr Jacek Protasiewicz,
chairperson of the delegation of the European Parliament for relations
with Belarus, to discuss the forthcoming elections. Following this
meeting, a parliamentary joint statement was issued on 14 December
2010 calling for democratic and transparent elections.
11. From 17 to 19 December 2010, I took part in the election observation
mission organised by the OSCE Office for Democratic Institutions
and Human Rights (OSCE/ODIHR) and the OSCE Parliamentary Assembly, the
preliminary findings and conclusions of which were published on
20 December 2010.
On the same day,
I issued a statement condemning violence and urging both security
forces and protestors to refrain from any further recourse to it
throughout the post-election process. I also called on the authorities
to release anyone detained solely for having expressed their views
regarding the outcome of the elections.
12. On 24 January 2011, the Political Affairs Committee held an
exchange of views on the situation in Belarus in the aftermath of
the presidential election with the participation of the two other
members of the Parliamentary Troika on Belarus, Mr Protasiewicz
and Ms Uta Zapf, chairperson of the OSCE Parliamentary Assembly
Ad Hoc Working Group on Belarus. They both insisted that it was
not possible, with respect to Belarus, to continue with business
as usual. Our discussion, which continued after the meeting of the committee,
has informed my report.
2. Presidential election and the aftermath
2.1. Election legislation and campaign
13. On 19 December 2010, the presidential election in
Belarus was held on the basis of an amended Electoral Code. The
Electoral Code had been revised following recommendations from the
OSCE Office for Democratic Institutions and Human Rights (OSCE/ODIHR)
concerning several important aspects, such as freedom to campaign
and funding of election campaigns, the composition and appointment
of electoral commissions, candidate registration, the integrity
of early voting, appeal procedures and vote counting. Upon the request
of the Political Affairs Committee, the Venice Commission, jointly
with the OSCE/ODIHR, prepared an opinion on these amendments.
14. According to this Joint Opinion,
which
was also presented orally to the Political Affairs Committee by the
Secretary of the Venice Commission on 1 October 2010, the amendments
represented a step towards removing some of the flaws in Belarus’
electoral legislation. However, they were deemed to be unlikely
to resolve the underlying concern that the legislative framework
for elections in Belarus continues to fall short of providing a
basis for genuinely democratic elections, in particular with regard
to the voting and counting process and to the tabulation of results.
15. Our Assembly was not invited to observe this election. The
Belarusian authorities decided to invite only those international
organisations of which Belarus is a member. A total of 27 000 domestic
observers were registered and a total of 1 032 international observers,
including those from the OSCE/ODIHR, the OSCE parliamentary assembly,
the Commonwealth of Independent States (CIS) and the CIS parliamentary assembly.
16. Despite some specific improvements in the legislation, according
to the OSCE preliminary findings published on 20 December 2010,
the presidential election followed an election campaign which was characterised
by the lack of a level playing field and an unequal contest between
President Lukashenko and his nine contenders, even though progress
was noted regarding the registration of candidates and the provision of
limited free TV and radio air time. In terms of media coverage,
all major TV stations demonstrated a clear bias in favour of the
incumbent, devoting some 89% of prime-time news coverage to his
campaign and official duties.
17. Of the estimated number of voters, 23.1% cast their vote during
the “early voting”, where observers noted the poor quality of ballot
boxes and seals and a lack of security features on ballot boxes.
In addition, only 0.26% of all members of the Precinct Election
Commissions (PEC) and 0.70% of the Territorial Election Commissions
(TEC) were nominated by political parties considered to be in opposition.
2.2. Preliminary findings and results
18. Belarus’ Central Election Commission reported that
President Lukashenko won 79.6% of the votes. Voter turnout amounted
to 90.65%, roughly 2% down from 2006.
19. According to the OSCE critical assessment, the “presidential
election showed that Belarus still has a considerable way to go
in meeting its OSCE commitments, although some specific improvements
were made”. International observers noted that the voting process
took place relatively smoothly, but the counting of votes was done
in a “non-transparent manner”.
20. They assessed almost half of vote counts monitored as “bad”
or “very bad”, which undermined the steps that had been taken to
improve the election. Observers did not have a real opportunity
to observe the counting or were restricted in doing so in 98% of
observed polling stations. In some cases, figures recorded in the
results protocols at the PECs were different upon arrival at the
TECs.
21. As an election observer, I was given no chance to watch the
vote counting. The ballots were quickly taken away by the members
of the election commission and were not read out loud in front of
us. After a while, we were merely presented with the result.
22. President Lukashenko himself gave a different reading of the
OSCE assessment of the election. In his view, everything the observers
wrote in their report pointed to a “considerable step forward compared
to the 2006 election” and this could form the basis to build Belarus’
relations with Europe.
23. Belarus Foreign Ministry spokesperson, Andrei Savinykh, commenting
on the preliminary results, said that the assertions published in
the preliminary report do not match, in their entirety, the prior
assessments of the mission made at all election stages and that
the tone of the declaration and the nature of the conclusions were
affected by the “illegal and provocative actions launched by the
opposition minority”.
24. It is worth noting that none of the country’s elections under
President Lukashenko have met international standards of freedom
and fairness. The most recent parliamentary elections, in 2008,
left parliament without a single opposition member.
2.3. Post-election protest and detention of protesters
and presidential candidates
25. On election day, a political demonstration in Minsk
was violently dispersed by the police and resulted in the arrest
of over 600 people, including former presidential candidates and
their supporters, human rights defenders and journalists. Many of
them were released after a few days. Belarus’ Interior Ministry
said that the majority of them had served administrative detention
from ten to fifteen days.
26. The Interior Ministry said that the authorities had charged
31 people with organising post-vote protests and “mass unrest”,
which carries the risk of imprisonment from five to fifteen years.
In a statement, the Ministry also said police had identified 120
people who “actively participated in mass disturbances on 19 December”.
27. Four former presidential candidates, Uladzimir Nyaklyayew,
Alyaksey Mikhalevich, Andrei Sannikau and Mikalay Statkevich have
been charged under Article 293 of the Criminal Code and are currently
being held in custody. Another former presidential candidate, Vital
Rymasheuski, was released at the beginning of January.
28. In the two weeks that followed the election, the crackdown
reportedly continued in a more targeted way. The homes of the relatives
of those arrested were searched, as well as the flats and offices
of human rights defenders, opposition activists and journalists.
29. According to the Belarusian Association of Journalists, 25
journalists were arrested in the crackdown and 21 were physically
assaulted. There have also been raids on critical Belarusian media
outlets and equipment has been confiscated, according to the independent
website Charter97. Students
who participated in the demonstration may face expulsion from universities
throughout Belarus. The Ministry of Justice also requested the Minsk
City Bar Association to take disciplinary measures against a number
of lawyers who have defended activists and opposition leaders.
30. Amnesty International is gathering information on all detainees.
Currently, the organisation has sufficient information to confirm
that 15 of them did not resort to or incite violence before or during
the demonstration. Amnesty believes that these 15 detainees are
facing charges solely because of the peaceful exercise of their rights
to freedom of assembly and freedom of expression and is calling
for their immediate and unconditional release and for the charges
against them to be dropped.
31. On 13 January 2011, my parliamentarian colleague, Ms Marieluise
Beck, sent me an analytical note which was prepared by the International
Observation Mission (IOM) of the Committee on International Control over
the Human Rights Situation in Belarus,
based
on data collected from 3 to 5 January 2011 from 73 individuals who
have been subjected to violence, including 12 detainees. All interviewed
detainees or arrested people described their conditions of transfer
and detention as inhuman and degrading. According to the IOM, the
trials of all interviewed detainees were biased and failed to meet
the criteria of a fair trial. A European Union request to visit
detainees has been denied, and human rights defenders are increasingly
concerned.
32. I am also deeply concerned about the safety and health of
the detainees who remain unaccounted for, in particular some of
the opposition leaders, such as Mr Nyaklyayew, a 64-year-old opposition
candidate, who was reportedly beaten unconscious in the street by
masked men and then abducted from his hospital bed by plain-clothes
officers hours later. His lawyer has not been allowed to meet with
the former presidential candidate since 29 December 2010.
33. At the same time, I am pleasantly surprised by the wave of
solidarity shown through the social networks that mobilised people
to raise money to pay the fines, discussed how they could help,
analysed pictures and videos from the demonstration and compared
official reports and independent media. These were also precious
sources of information along with official reports.
2.4. Subsequent post-election developments
34. The most poignant example of the current crackdown
is that of three-year-old Danil Sannikau, whose imprisoned parents
are former presidential candidate Andrei Sannikau and independent
journalist Irina Khalip. Danil’s grandmother, Lyutsina Khalip, has
been informed by the authorities that they are investigating to
see whether she is “competent” to care for the boy. If they decide
she is not, he may become a ward of the state.
35. The mother of Pavel Sevyarynets, an activist of the Belarusian
Christian Democracy party who is being held in the detention center
of the KGB, had to cancel her visit to Warsaw after being pulled
over by KGB officers in Minsk. The wife of Mr Mikhalevich, a former
presidential candidate,was
also prevented from travelling to Warsaw for a conference on the
situation in Belarus on 12 January 2011.
36. Across the country, anyone who is known to have any connection
with the country’s opposition is being called in for questioning
by the security services. In my view, these unjustified actions
of the authorities can unquestionably be described as politically
motivated persecution of political opponents.
37. For their part, the authorities have tried to marginalise
the protesters, presenting them as a bunch of “despicable bandits”
and “hooligans” attempting to disrupt the otherwise peaceful life
of the Belarusian people and trying to organise a “political upheaval
that was outside all legal scenarios”.
Information
submitted by the Mission of Belarus to the Council of Europe on
3 January 2011, outlining the government position on the episodes
of violence, was made available to the members of the Political
Affairs Committee at its meeting on 24 January 2011 and made public.
38. On 29 December 2010, the president-elect decided not to wait
for his official inauguration, which took place on 21 January 2011,
and appointed a new government.
39. On 31 December 2010, the Belarusian authorities sent another
negative signal to the international community by signalling that
there was no objective reason to prolong the mandate of the OSCE
office in Minsk, which has maintained a presence in Belarus since
1998. The mandate of this office must be renewed annually by the
56 OSCE participating states and it expired on 31 December 2010.
According to the Belarusian authorities, the OSCE has completed
its work in the country.
40. On 9 January 2011, 14 Belarusian opposition groups decided
to establish a National Co-ordinating Council of Pro-democratic
Opposition, which will push for, among other things, the release
of opposition activists arrested for political motives. The participants
signed a declaration promising that the Council will be informing
Belarusian citizens and the international community about the situation
in the country, pushing for respect for the principles of the rule
of law and of democracy.
41. The Council includes representatives of the United Civic Party,
the Spravedlivy Mir (Just World) Belarusian Party of the Left, the
Belarusian Social Democratic Hramada, the “Tell the Truth!” campaign,
the Movement for Freedom, the unregistered Belarusian Christian
Democracy party and the Belarusian Congress of Democratic Trade
Unions. Politician Alyaksandr Kazulin, who ran for president in
2006 and later spent more than two years in prison on what was viewed
as a politically motivated charge, also joined the Council.
42. Following a “warning” issued against the Belarus Helsinki
Committee, on 12 January 2011, by the Ministry of Justice, this
human rights group risks being shut down at any moment as one more
warning suffices for this purpose. The Ministry complained that
a Helsinki Committee report on restrictions faced by lawyers of political
detainees to the United Nations Special Rapporteur on the Independence
of Lawyers and Judges was an “attempt to discredit the Republic
of Belarus in the eyes of the world”.
43. On 14 January 2011, the government-controlled newspaper Sovetskaya Belorussiya published
what it called “previously classified” documents containing disparaging
information about President Lukashenko’s opponents and their “ties
with foreign governments”, as well as accusing European states,
in particular Polish and German officials, of “plotting to overthrow”
the government of Belarus, an accusation that Poland and Germany
denied.
3. Reactions of the international community
44. President Lukashenko has faced strong criticism from
the international community for the repressive measures taken in
the wake of the election, resulting in a high number of what are
considered as “political prisoners”. The announcement that Belarus
would close the Minsk office of the OSCE did not help him win any support
abroad.
3.1. Council of Europe
45. As I said earlier, I was the first representative
of the Council of Europe to react on 20 December 2010, condemning
the violence and calling on the authorities to release anyone detained
solely for the expression of their views regarding the outcome of
the election.
46. On 21 December 2010, the Secretary General of the Council
of Europe, Thorbjørn Jagland, also reacted to the situation in Belarus
saying that “President Lukashenko should accept that elections are
an occasion for the people to choose its leaders, not the other
way around”. He considered that the flaws in the presidential vote,
as reported by the OSCE, and the crackdown on protesters were a
regrettable sign that another opportunity to end Belarus’ self-imposed
isolation in Europe might be lost. He added that the Council of
Europe was “disappointed but not discouraged”, and would continue
to support any genuine initiative which could help to bring Belarus
closer to Council of Europe values and Council of Europe membership.
47. On 12 January 2011, the Committee of Ministers of the Council
of Europe adopted a declaration asking the Belarus authorities to
provide additional information on the basis upon which the presidential
candidates, journalists and human rights activists were arrested
in the wake of the election. The 47 Ministers said that detainees
should be immediately released and their human rights guaranteed.
Political freedoms should be fully respected. The Ministers said
that they would continue supporting the establishment of closer
relations between the Council of Europe and Belarus only on the
basis of respect for European values and principles.
48. On 18 January 2011, the Belarusian Foreign Minister, Sergei
Martynov, addressed a letter to the Minister for Foreign Affairs
of Turkey and Chairman-in-Office of the Committee of Ministers,
Ahmet Davutoğlu, providing further information on the recent election,
on the authorities’ response to the demonstration and on the situation of
the detainees.
49. On 19 January 2011, the Ministers’ deputies responded to a
written question tabled by my colleague, Mr Pieter Omtzigt.
The
Ministers stated that “the Committee of Ministers intends to continue
and if possible strengthen its co-operation activities with civil
society, including the independent media, in Belarus. The relations
with the authorities of that country will be guided by the follow-up
they will give to the statement of the Committee of Ministers, in
particular regarding the immediate release of the presidential candidates,
journalists and human rights activists arrested in the wake of the
election.”
3.2. European Union
50. In a joint statement issued on 23 December 2010,
the European Union High Representative, Catherine Ashton, and the
United States Secretary of State, Hillary Clinton, urged Belarus
to release presidential candidates and others detained after the
election. They regretted that “the elections and their aftermath
– particularly the continuing detention of presidential candidates
and new detentions and raids targeting the media – represent[ed]
a step backwards in the development of democratic governance,” and
called for the immediate release of all the detained candidates.
However, they added that the United States and the European Union
remained willing to help Belarus meet its commitments on human rights
and basic freedoms.
51. In the European Union, steps are under way to launch discussions
of the possible renewal of European Union visa sanctions against
top Belarus officials. The meeting of the 27 European Union Foreign
Ministers on 31 January 2011 might reintroduce sanctions against
the Belarusian authorities through the possible reintroduction of
a visa ban for the Belarus president and other officials.
52. On 14 January 2011, the European Union Commissioner for Enlargement,
Mr Štefan Füle, said that the European Union’s objective was to
obtain the release of political prisoners and the safety of all
those detained. He added, however, that a balance between sending
a clear message of condemnation to the authorities and reinforcing
contact with the Belarusian people must be achieved. In January
2011, Lady Ashton met with a number of representatives of the opposition
and the wider public in Belarus, including relatives of those detained
and also with Mr Martynov.
53. Speaking at the European Parliament on 19 January 2011, Lady
Ashton said that “the events we witnessed were an affront to our
vision of respect for human rights, fundamental freedoms and democracy.
In addition to the unwarranted use of force, the electoral process
as a whole was clearly undermined by the detention of civil society
and opposition representatives”. Lady Ashton stressed that the respect
for human rights and fundamental freedoms was at the core of European
Union foreign policy, and of the Eastern Partnership, and was part
of a set of common values that the European Union shared with its
closest partners. She also underscored that the European Union was
set to adopt “targeted measures” against the Belarusian Government,
possibly including a travel ban on President Lukashenko.
54. In 2006, President Lukashenko had already faced a visa ban
and had his assets frozen, following the contested presidential
elections at the time. Thirty-four officials were also included
in this European Union blacklist, following the arrest of Alyaksandr
Kazulin, the presidential candidate, in 2006. European sanctions did
not include economic sanctions in an effort to prevent penalising
the whole country. Two years later, in 2008, the European Union
lifted reprisal measures, suspending the visa ban, following the
Belarusian Government’s decision to release several political prisoners.
55. In addition to visa bans, European Union measures might include:
a review of the country’s participation in the European Union’s
Eastern Partnership; continued pressure for the release of all Belarusians
detained in the post-election crackdown who are to be treated as
political prisoners; and assistance to those arrested and to their
families.
56. On 12 January 2011, the European Parliament discussed the
Belarus crisis during an extraordinary meeting of the Committee
on Foreign Affairs in association with the Sub-committee on Human
Rights, the delegation for relations with Belarus and the delegation
to the Euronest Parliamentary Assembly. On behalf of the European
Parliament’s delegation for relations with Belarus, Mr Protasiewicz
condemned the use of brutal force against candidates and activists
and called upon the Belarusian authorities to refrain from all forms
of repression.
57. On 20 January 2011, the European Parliament adopted a resolution
calling on the European Union toimposea travel ban and assets freeze
on Belarusian Government officials, members of the judiciary and security
officers involved in the government’s violent post-election crackdown.
According to the MEPs, lifting these measures should be conditional
upon the release of the government’s political opponents.
58. The European Parliament also called on the European Union
to ease visa access to the European Union member states for Belarusian
citizens and amplify its financial support to independent media
and NGOs promoting democracy and opposing the regime. MEPs called
for the European Commission’s assistance to state-owned media in
the country to be halted and for the NGOs banned in the country
to be able to benefit from European Union programmes. Furthermore,
the European Parliament demanded a re-run of the December presidential
election in accordance with international standards.
3.3. OSCE
59. The OSCE chairperson-in-office, the Lithuanian Foreign
Minister, Audronius Ažubalis, reiterated in a meeting on 5 January
2011 in Vilnius that he considers it crucial that the OSCE be able
to continue operating a field operation in Belarus. Lithuania has
started diplomatic consultations with OSCE participating states
in an effort to find ways to enable the OSCE to continue its work
in Belarus.
60. The OSCE Representative on Freedom of the Media, Dunja Mijatovic,
called, on 5 January 2011, for an end to the attacks on independent
media in Belarus and urged the authorities to immediately release imprisoned
journalists.
61. On 11 January 2011, Ms Zapf called for dialogue among political
forces in Belarus. While appealing to the authorities to cease harassment
of opposition politicians, media and civil society representatives,
Ms Zapf stressed the importance of continued participation in the
OSCE process and the need to find peaceful, inclusive solutions
to political problems in Belarus. Ms Zapf also expressed her strong
support that the OSCE office in Minsk be able to continue its operations
under its established mandate.
3.4. United Nations
62. On 10 January 2011, the United Nations Secretary-General,
Ban Ki-moon, called for the release of former presidential candidates
and other opposition figures detained in Belarus following the post-election protest.
He noted the serious concern of observers over the electoral process
and subsequent developments and expressed his concern about the
continued detention of journalists, opposition candidates and their supporters.
3.5. Others
63. On 20 December 2010, Foreign Ministers Radosław Sikorski
of Poland and Guido Westerwelle of Germany issued a joint statement
condemning the beating and detention of the opposition leaders.
They called on the Belarusian authorities to release immediately
those who have been arrested and to enter into dialogue with the
opposition. In view of the findings of the OSCE/ODIHR election assessment,
they considered the elections a severe setback for the democratic
ambitions of the people of Belarus.
64. On 23 December 2010, the Foreign Ministers of the Czech Republic,
Germany, Poland and Sweden published a joint article in which they
condemned police brutality. “There can be no business-as-usual between the
European Union and Belarus’ president, Aleksandr Lukashenko, after
what has happened since the presidential election in Belarus last
Sunday. … Continued positive engagement with Mr Lukashenko at the moment
seems to be a waste of time and money … He has made his choice –
and it is a choice against everything the European Union stands
for.”
65. On 18 January 2011, Poland introduced an entry ban targeting
a number of Belarusian Government officials and has encouraged other
European countries to follow suit.
66. The United States announced that it supports the European
Parliament resolution calling for sanctions against the Belarusian
leadership and that it is ready to take similar measures to restore
sanctions that had previously been lifted.
67. On 21 January 2011, several European Union ambassadors accredited
in Minsk boycotted the ceremony of inauguration of the President
of Belarus and took part in an international conference in Vilnius
on Belarus’ post-election crackdown on the opponents.
4. Further steps
68. Like the vast majority of the representatives of
the international community, I am deeply concerned by the unprecedented
wave of violence, intimidation, arrests and prosecution of political
opponents, human rights defenders, media workers and citizens of
Belarus, which are ongoing.
69. It is difficult to find grounds to boost relations with Belarus,
even though the prospects of such a boost seemed more realistic
and feasible before the elections. I am personally convinced that
President Lukashenko has done himself a major disservice. The vilification
of his opponents and their exclusion from the political arena undermines
his declared political project to build a “strong and prosperous”
Belarus.
70. I am still convinced that badly needed reforms in Belarus
can only be carried out with the full commitment of the democratic
forces of Belarus, civil society representatives and human rights
defenders, but also with the establishment and government officials.
71. The violent repression of the political protest in the aftermath
of the presidential election represents a clear step backwards and
an outright disregard for the core values upheld by the Council
of Europe. It shows that our policy of engagement, as set out in
Resolution 1671 (2009) on the situation in Belarus, has regrettably not
resulted in positive changes.
72. In the light of the above, the Assembly simply cannot disregard
recent and ongoing events and continue with “business as usual”.
73. The Assembly should, in particular, call on the Belarusian
authorities to:
- immediately
release all opposition candidates and their supporters, journalists
and human rights defenders detained on political grounds;
- cease harassment and intimidation of opposition politicians,
media and civil society representatives;
- conduct a transparent investigation into the abusive use
of force by police and security forces against the demonstrators;
- stop expelling students from universities and dismissing
people from their work place due to their participation in the protest;
- reconsider their decision to close the OSCE office in
Minsk and extend its mandate in 2011 and subsequently;
- complete the reform process of the electoral legislation
and practice by taking into account the full set of recommendations
of the OSCE/ODIHR and the European Commission for Democracy through
Law (the Venice Commission).
74. I remain convinced that any sanctions and restrictions in
contacts and interactions with those responsible for the events,
including the country’s highest officials, should not lead towards
further isolation of the Belarusian people. The Assembly should
therefore strengthen dialogue with Belarus’ democratic forces, civil
society, opposition groups, free media and human rights defenders.
In the same vein, the Assembly should call on all Council of Europe
member states to:
- foster exchange
programmes for Belarusian opposition political parties and conferences
in support of Belarusian democracy;
- maintain and foster dialogue with Belarus’ civil society
and invest in people-to-people contacts with Belarus at multiple
levels;
- consider facilitating the granting of visas to the ordinary
citizens of Belarus;
- encourage universities to open their doors to Belarusian
students who have been expelled for political activities;
- support the continuation of the OSCE office in Minsk under
its established mandate.
75. As far as its own relations with Belarus are concerned, it
is worth recalling that the Parliamentary Assembly, in its Resolution
1671 (2009), adopted in June 2009 (rapporteur: Mr Andrea Rigoni,
Italy, ALDE), responded to some improvements in the situation in
Belarus and set out a new course of engagement and openness in its
relations with the Belarusian authorities, while continuing to support
the strengthening of Belarusian NGOs and civil society. The Assembly
therefore asked the Bureau to lift the suspension of special guest
status for the Parliament of Belarus provided that a moratorium
on the execution of the death penalty was decreed, and reiterated
its conviction that “dialogue can be sustained only through Belarus’
continuous progress towards Council of Europe standards”.
76. As already mentioned above, in April 2010, following a debate
under urgent procedure prompted mainly by the execution of two prisoners
in March 2010,
the Assembly, in its
Resolution 1727 (2010),
decided to put on hold the Assembly’s activities involving high-level
contacts between itself and the Belarusian authorities. On that
occasion, the Assembly reiterated that there cannot be progress
on dialogue without progress towards Council of Europe standards.
77. In view of the current additional serious setbacks, I propose
that the Assembly:
- reaffirms
its decision to put on hold its activities involving high-level
contacts with the Belarusian authorities;
- calls on the Bureau of the Assembly not to lift the suspension
of the special guest status of the Parliament of Belarus until:
- a moratorium on the execution of the death penalty has
been decreed by the competent Belarusian authorities;
- there is substantial, tangible and verifiable progress
in terms of respect for the democratic values and principles upheld
by the Council of Europe.