Belarus leader signs law increasing prison terms for protesters

8 June 2021, 14:44

Belarus President Alexander Lukashenko (Sergei Sheleg/AP)
Belarus. Picture: PA

President Alexander Lukashenko has faced months of protests.

Belarus’ authoritarian president signed a law that threatens demonstrators with years in prison, the latest move in a relentless crackdown on protests against his rule.

The law envisages a prison sentence of up to three years for the participants in unsanctioned protests who had faced sanctions for joining them on at least two occasions over a year.

Previously, taking part in unauthorised demonstrations was punishable by fines or brief jail terms ranging from several days to two weeks.

President Alexander Lukashenko has faced months of protests fuelled by his reelection to a sixth term in a vote last August that was widely seen as rigged.

The Belarus authorities have responded to demonstrations with a fierce crackdown that saw more than 35,000 people arrested and thousands beaten by police.

The wide-ranging repression was spotlighted again on May 23, when Belarus diverted a Ryanair flight travelling from Greece to Lithuania to Minsk where authorities arrested Raman Pratasevich, a dissident journalist who was aboard.

File picture of Belarus opposition supporters rallying at Independence Square in Minsk, Belarus (AP)
File picture of Belarus opposition supporters rallying at Independence Square in Minsk, Belarus (AP)

Since his arrest, 26-year-old Mr Pratasevich has been shown in several videos on state TV, tearfully repenting for his activities and praising Mr Lukashenko in remarks that the opposition slammed as coerced.

The new bill signed by Mr Lukashenko also toughens punishment for the “rude violation of public order” from three years to five years in prison.

The authorities have widely levelled those charges against protest participants.

The legislation also introduces two-year prison terms for posting “banned information”, such as calls for the government’s ousting, on the web.

It follows up on another law approved by Mr Lukashenko last month that bans news media from doing live reports on unauthorised demonstrations and allows the information ministry to shut down a media organisation without a court order.

Belarus authorities have relentlessly cracked down on journalists, including blocking several major news websites and outlawing opposition-leaning messaging app channels as extremist.

By Press Association

Latest World News

See more Latest World News

The Lamone river overflows its banks near Bagnacavallo, in the region of Emilia-Romagna, Italy

Floods in central Europe threaten new areas as 1,000 people evacuated in Italy

The remains of the Titan submersible on the floor of the Atlantic Ocean

Mission specialist for Titan sub owner says goal was to ‘make dreams come true’

People watch the speech of Hezbollah leader Hassan Nasrallah as they sit in a cafe

Hezbollah leader says pager attack crossed ‘red line’ as wider war fears mount

Denmark's Queen Margrethe

Denmark’s Queen Margrethe, who abdicated this year, in hospital after fall

Police officers patrol during a press tour at the Oktoberfest in Munich, Germany

Oktoberfest tightens security in wake of deadly knife attack in western Germany

Lebanese soldiers stand guard as their comrades prepare to detonate a walkie-talkie that was found at the parking of the American University Hospital in Beirut

Hezbollah attacks Israel with drones as fears of a widening war mount

Bosnian Roman Catholic women pray on the occasion of the feast of the Assumption in Medjugorje, some 75 miles south of the Bosnian capital of Sarajevo, in 2000

Vatican green lights devotion at site where Virgin Mary reportedly appeared

Democratic presidential nominee Vice President Kamala Harris speaks at the Congressional Hispanic Caucus Institute leadership conference

Harris plans livestream with Oprah as Trump to address Israeli-American group

Israel’s Strategy Is Forcing Hezbollah into Tough Decisions

Israel’s Strategy Is Forcing Hezbollah into Tough Decisions

Indian Prime Minister Narendra Modi addresses an election rally in Srinagar, Indian controlled Kashmir

Modi visits Indian-controlled Kashmir on election campaign amid massive security

Two-month-old baby hippo Moo Deng walks at the Khao Kheow Open Zoo in Chonburi province, Thailand

Thai zoo home to viral baby hippo Moo Deng is patenting the pygmy

Former Nissan Motor Corporation executive Greg Kelly speaks during an interview with The Associated Press in Tokyo

Lawyer for American charged in trial of ex-Nissan chief appeals for ‘justice’

APTOPIX Lebanon Israel Exploding Pagers

Lebanon rocked again by exploding devices as Israel declares new phase of war

Truong My Lan, a real estate tycoon sentenced to death for financial fraud, attends her second trial in Vietnam’s largest fraud case in Ho Chi Minh City, Vietnam

Real estate tycoon sentenced to death for fraud faces trial on new charges

Chinese authorities inspect the scene of a stabbing at the Shenzhen Japanese School in Shenzhen, China after a 10-year-old Japanese student was attacked by a man

Pupil at Japanese school dies after stabbing in China

The former IDF spokeswoman was speaking to LBC in the wake of a series of deadly attacks on the Hezbollah communications infrastructure

Hezbollah 'could not be more vulnerable' after deadly wave of attacks former IDF spokesperson tells LBC