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Pavel Latuška, member of the Presidium of the Coordination Council formed by the opposition, announced this on his channel of the Telegram correspondence platform.
“The National Anti-Crisis Board will send appeals with the evidence in the report to the interior ministries and embassies of various countries, calling for the cessation of all cooperation with the regime and the initiation of prosecutions for those responsible for violence against Belarusian citizens,” he said. Latuška on Friday.
Belarus is in its third month of mass protests over the August 9 presidential election, which was won by the autocrat Aliaksandr Lukashenko, who has ruled the country since 1994. The opposition and western democracies view these elections as rigged.
The protesters are demanding the resignation of Lukashenko, the release of political prisoners and new elections.
Last Thursday, OSCE Rapporteur Wolfgang Benedict presented a report on human rights violations in Belarus to the OSCE Permanent Council. OSCE participating states have been warned not to recognize the results of Blatrush’s presidential elections and to demand new elections.
At the end of October, P. Latuška, together with representatives of the Belarusian political democratic forces, announced that he was establishing the National Anti-Crisis Board (NAV).
“The Coordinating Council has been formed to conduct the negotiations, and the NAV will be the institution that will guarantee that the subsequent objectives of starting negotiations and stabilizing the situation in the country are achieved during the transfer of power to the democratic forces,” the communicated in the Telegram of Latatu.
For soldiers: an invitation to advance towards the nation
After the brutal violence against protesters in Belarus, the opposition called on troops to move away from President Alexander Lukashenko.
“They want to involve him in the war against his people,” wrote opposition leader Sviatlana Cichanouskaya and former Culture Minister Pavel Latuško. “Mr. Lukashenko no longer has the resources to stay in power.” The armed forces must be loyal to the nation. They do not have to carry out “criminal orders,” according to an address posted on the Telegram news channel.
Protests against Lukashenko have occurred regularly in Belarus since the disputed elections on November 9. The Electoral Commission announced that it supposedly obtained 80.1 percent of the votes. votes. The opposition considers Mr. Cichanouskaya the winner.
The security forces continue to use brutal actions against the protesters.
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