US call for change angers Russia: Rice terms Belarus true dictatorship
VILNIUS, April 21: Russia and the United States clashed over Belarus on Thursday as Moscow’s foreign minister rebuffed a call by the US Secretary of State for change in what she branded central Europe’s “last true dictatorship”.
“I think the democratic process and the process of reform cannot be imposed from outside,” Sergei Lavrov said of Belarus at a news conference in the Lithuanian capital during a meeting between NATO and Russia.
“We would not of course advocate what some people call ‘regime change’ anywhere,” he said, reacting to US Secretary of State Condoleezza Rice’s remark on Wednesday that Belarussian President Alexander Lukashenko ran “the last true dictatorship in the centre of Europe”, and that it was time for change.
But Ms Rice insisted the United States had a role to play in bringing democracy to former Soviet Belarus, and urged the world to monitor closely presidential elections there next year.
“The 2006 elections really do present an excellent opportunity for the international community to focus on the need for free and fair elections in Belarus,” she told a news conference after Mr Lavrov had made his comments.
“Elections have been an important catalyst in any number of countries now around the world,” she added. In the former Soviet Union alone, governments have been thrown out after rigging polls in Georgia, Ukraine and Kyrgyzstan in recent months.
She said Washington would not intervene directly in Belarus to force change but could and should “shine a spotlight on places where people are still denied freedom”.
“We can put that on the international agenda. We can insist on certain standards of behaviour by any government, any place in the world, including standards of behaviour when it comes to the holding of elections,” she said.
Ms Rice earlier met Belarussian opposition leaders to show support for democracy groups despite Russian concerns that Washington was interfering in its “near abroad”.
“DISAPPEARED”: The opposition leaders, among them the wife of a journalist who “disappeared” and the head of a university that has been closed, told a Vilnius news conference they wanted to hold mass street protests and would boycott next year’s 2006 elections they believed Lukashenko would rig.
European Union’s foreign policy chief Javier Solana agreed with Ms Rice’s call for change. “There is no doubt that the time has come for change, I have said that many, many, many years ago,” he told reporters.
The opposition leaders said Ms Rice and Solana’s stand had encouraged them to create a nationwide, unified movement behind a single opposition figure and publicize abroad the issue of prominent opponents of the president who had disappeared.
“We do not intend to be playing in elections. We intend to present an alternative and initiate massive pressure for change,” Aleksander Dobrovolskiy, a leader of the opposition United Civic Party, told the news conference.
Some commentators have suggested Belarus, run by Lukashenko since 1994, may be the next ex-Soviet state in line for change.
Mr Lukashenko, accused abroad of crushing opponents and the media, has warned the West against stirring up trouble in the country of 10 million people wedged between Russia and EU members Poland, Latvia and Lithuania.
He has vowed to thwart any efforts at revolution.
A senior Belarussian official dismissed Ms Rice’s intervention in the debate.
“The Belarussian people choose the authorities and the Belarussian people determine their fate and future, not the US Secretary of State Condoleezza Rice,” Deputy Foreign Minister Viktor Gaisenok said. “We are not pieces in somebody else’s game. Nor are we pawns on a chessboard.”
Mr Lavrov, who was speaking in English, carefully chose the phrase ‘regime change’ to echo the term Washington used of Iraq. —Reuters