Workers and students pose strike challenge to Belarusian leader

Workers and students pose strike challenge to Belarusian leader

MOSCOW-Reuters

Factory workers chanted slogans, students and pensioners took to the streets, and police used force to detain people on Oct. 26 as the Belarusian opposition sought to ramp up pressure on veteran leader Alexander Lukashenko with a nationwide strike.

Lukashenko defied an ultimatum to surrender power by midnight, challenging his opponents to carry out a threat to paralyse the country with strikes, nearly three months after his disputed election victory unleashed mass protests.

If sustained, the strikes could open a new phase in the crisis, testing whether the opposition has the mass support it needs to bring enterprises across the country of 9.5 million people to a halt. The opposition has mounted some strikes at state-run factories previously, but they were not sustained.

Belarusian media reported groups of strikers at many major state-controlled enterprises. However, the prime minister's spokeswoman said all the major industrial companies were working normally.

Many shops, cafes and restaurants were closed in central Minsk. Hundreds of university students took to the streets in the capital, clapping and chanting as passing cars tooted their horns in support.

A crowd of around 2,000-3,000 marched down a main street waving red and white flags and protest signs.
Elsewhere in Minsk, black-clad officers in masks poured out of vans, detaining people and dragging them away, footage from news website Tut.by showed.

The Vesna-96 rights group said police had detained 150 people across the country on Oct. 26.

Exiled opposition politician Sviatlana Tsikhanouskaya has urged Belarusians to block roads, shut down workplaces, stop using government shops and services and withdraw all money from their bank accounts.

Lukashenko has scoffed, asking "Who will feed the kids?"

Official media said Lukashenko was at work as normal on Oct. 26 and that he had a busy working week ahead of him.

Tsikhanouskaya called on Oct. 25 for the strike to go ahead after police fired stun grenades and detained scores of people at protests by tens of thousands in Minsk and elsewhere, the 11th straight weekend of huge demonstrations.

"The regime once again showed Belarusians that force is the only thing it is capable of," she said in a statement.

"That's why tomorrow, Oct. 26, a national strike will begin."

If strikes come close to paralysing the country, it could be a further test of Russian support for its ally Lukashenko.
Since the crisis began, Moscow has backed him with a $1.5 billion loan and increased security cooperation.

Official results showed Lukashenko won a landslide election victory on Aug. 9, but the opposition and Western countries say the vote was rigged, which he denies.

Around 15,000 people have since been arrested during a crackdown on mass demonstrations. Nearly all opposition leaders fled or were jailed.