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Apparently, Gizzan writes, Aliaksandr Lukashenko gave them the green light.
It is based on the portal donbasstoday.com a message that quotes from 2014 Hillary Goldberg, a volunteer who helps the Donbass militia.
“Our boys are going to Minsk to question Protasevičius,” he said.
15 minutes recalls that the Kremlin’s propaganda seeks to divert attention from the persecution of the Belarusian journalist Romano Protasevičius in an attempt to portray him as a fascist fighting in eastern Ukraine. Analysts say the campaign to discredit the guy arrested on his way to Vilnius is highly targeted.
Nerijus Maliukevičius, a professor at the Vilnius University Institute of International Relations and Political Science (VU TSPMI), says that one of the ways is to try to discredit Protasevičius by drawing some photos or a caption about his alleged involvement in the Azov Battalion.
“In this case, you can’t see Lukashenko’s crooked line trying to create such stories, but the capabilities of Russian television (public speakers and supposedly political scientists) were connected,” said N. Malukevich.
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