Belarus Monday dismissed as "short-sighted" an EU travel ban
imposed on President Alexander Lukashenko and 30 top officials to
press home the 25-nation bloc's denunciation of his re-election
last month.
"Short-sighted actions of this sort are clearly ineffective and
serve only to complicate problems in our relations rather than
trying to solve them," Foreign Ministry spokesman Andrei Popov said
in a statement.
Belarus has rejected allegations by the European Union and
United States that Lukashenko's March 19 re-election, with an
official tally of 83 percent of the vote, was flagrantly
rigged.
Western countries have long accused the veteran Belarussian
leader of authoritarianism.
Lukashenko was sworn in at the weekend for a third term and said
his victory showed Belarussians wanted no part of what he described
as Western-inspired attempts to foment upheaval.
The European Union Monday banned Lukashenko and 30 ministers,
prosecutors and regional election officials from entering the
25-nation bloc.
EU foreign ministers, meeting in Luxembourg, said they had
sanctioned them for rigging the presidential polls and for a
crackdown on opposition activists.
The EU did not freeze the assets of the banned individuals for
now but warned it may do so later, possibly as early as next month,
and asked the executive European Commission to propose further
targeted measures.
"We should impose that kind of measure in the future," Czech
Foreign minister Cyril Svoboda told reporters about asset
freezes.
The foreign ministers vowed to help Belarussian civil society,
including by enabling students to come and study in the EU and by
enhancing access to independent media.
Lukashenko was number one on the visa-ban list, followed by his
head of presidential administration, Gennady Nevyglas, the
ministers of education, information and justice, as well as the
chairman of the lower house of parliament and the head of the KGB
security service.
Others named include the prosecutor-general, several judges and
prosecutors, the country's seven regional election officials and
the head of the state television and radio company.
Alexander Milinkevich, nearest rival to Lukashenko in the
elections, called for hundreds more officials to be put on the list
of banned people when he spoke at the European Parliament last
week, but argued against economic sanctions.
Svoboda also urged his European partners to agree to ban more
individuals from entering the EU.
The visa ban list is open, names may be added, or could be
withdrawn if jailed activists are freed and human rights and media
freedom improve, the ministers said in a statement.
Many ministers said the EU should raise the issue of Belarus
with Russia, including to ask it to apply pressure on Minsk for the
freeing of activists, an EU official said.
(China Daily April 11, 2006)