Before the meeting in Sochi, Cichanouskaya’s message to Putin



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“I want to remind Vladimir Putin: what he decides and what he agrees during the meeting in Sochi will not have legal force. All the agreements signed with the illegitimate president Lukashenko will be reviewed by the new government because the Belarusian people did not trust or support Lukashenko in the elections. I am very sorry that he has decided to have a dialogue with the usurper and not with the Belarusian people, “the report says.

The presumed Belarusian President Lukashenko flew to Russia on Monday to meet with President Vladimir Putin. His plane is reported to have already landed in the Sochi seaside resort on the Black Sea.

No documents will be signed or a joint press conference is scheduled, Kremlin spokesman Dmitry Peskov said previously.

According to the press service of the President of Russia, the Sochi summit “is scheduled to discuss the most important issues of a greater strategic partnership between Russia and Belarus and the development of the alliance.”

According to the Kremlin, special attention should be paid to “the implementation of large joint projects in the fields of trade and economy, energy, culture and humanitarian affairs, as well as the prospects for integration processes within the framework of the trade union state.”

Lukashenko said last week that he planned to “put all the points on the most sensitive and sensitive issues for both parties” in talks with Putin.

Mr. Lukashenko also said he hoped to put a “fat point” in the meeting with Putin on the implementation of the agreements of the prime ministers of the two countries so that they could “move forward”.

This will be Lukashenko’s first visit to Russia since a wave of protests in Belarus over his disputed re-election to a sixth term. The opposition and western countries consider that these elections are rigged.

Lukashenko’s relations with Russia have been quite volatile so far, and he has repeatedly tried to topple Moscow with the European Union when it has been to his advantage. However, after mass protests began in the country after the August 9 elections, Lukashenko sought Putin’s advice and help and spoke with him by phone on a regular basis.

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