Skip to content. | Skip to navigation

Personal tools
Sections
You are here: Home Breaking news EU ministers agree to suspend Belarus sanctions: France

EU ministers agree to suspend Belarus sanctions: France

12 October 2015, 17:32 CET
— filed under: , , ,

(LUXEMBOURG) - EU foreign ministers agreed Monday to suspend sanctions against Belarus after elections won by authoritarian President Alexander Lukashenko passed off without incident, France's European affairs minister said.

"We have taken the decision to suspend the sanctions for the next four months but they can be reinstated immediately if that is required," minister Harlem Desir told reporters, adding that they will be reviewed at the end of that period.

The EU has imposed travel bans and asset freezes against Lukashenko and around 170 other individuals and 14 groups for rights abuses.

Lukashenko, 61, won a fifth consecutive term by a landslide and pointedly warned the opposition against protests that could derail the lifting of the EU sanctions.

A shrewd operator whom Washington once dubbed "Europe's last dictator," Lukashenko has recently raised his standing with the EU by seeking to distance his ex-Soviet nation from Russia over the Ukraine crisis.

The EU's Belarus sanctions officially come up for renewal on October 31 when the plan is to extend and then immediately suspend them until January.

Brussels will then review progress to see if Lukashenko has gone back on any of his promises.

Desir, standing in for French Foreign Minister Laurent Fabius at an EU meeting in Luxembourg, said the decision followed the president's release of the last political prisoners in Belarus over the summer, and the fact that the elections, easily won by Lukashenko, passed off without incident.

"We want to encourage this country to move towards democracy and of course towards respect for human rights ... the release of the prisoners was for us a very important signal," Desir said.

"The vote took place in a calm atmosphere although we are still waiting for observer reports to come to a final conclusion," he added.

Observers from the Organization for Security and Cooperation in Europe (OSCE) said the vote had been undermined by "significant problems," especially during the count.

"It is clear that Belarus still has a long way to go towards fulfilling its democratic commitments," Kent Harstedt, head of the OSCE mission to Belarus, said in a statement.

EU sources told AFP last week sanctions would be suspended if the elections passed off without major incident.

"That means, if there are no new arrests of opposition figures, if there is no violence and no attacks against the press," one EU diplomat said.

German Foreign Minister Frank-Walter Steinmeier said earlier that "as far as we could observe from Berlin, there has not been as much repression around the elections as previously."

The outcome of Sunday's poll was "not a surprise," but the country was changing and Lukashenko had freed the political prisoners, Steinmeier noted.

"That is why we will talk... about the conditions, the timeframe under which sanctions against Belarus can be changed or be lifted," he said.


Document Actions