European Democrat Students, BullsEye Magazine, 79th Edition

Page 8

Protests in Belarus: The heroes of the streets

9’ read

For months, people in Belarus have taken to the streets to protest the fraudulent Presidential elections. For months now, the whole world has been watching the Belarusians conduct peaceful actions, while Lukashenko and his retinue are coming up with more and more absurd actions astonishing the whole world by their cruelty and democracy crackdown. According to OSCE’s report under the Moscow Mechanism, a whole list of serious violations has been recorded, from violations of the electoral laws and procedures, to cruelty and torture against Belarusian citizens. Belarusian protests or the Belarusian revolution?

Female faces of Belarusians discontent

From a historical perspective, the protests in Belarus are a vivid and exceptional phenomenon in the history of the country. Belarus was hardly ever known for such massive powerful mobilizations, even in the era of the fall of the Soviet Union in the ‘89-90s. Strong aversion towards war and any form of violence is one of the outstanding features of Belarusian mentality that for a long time allowed Lukashenko to stay in power.

Belarussian women have played a key role in this uprising. To a certain extent, they became “accidental” heroes of our times. Lukashenka himself unwittingly facilitated women’s accession into the political scene, and in a narrower sense, their participation in the movement. First of all, he miscalculated, thinking that a 37-year old woman, a former teacher and a housewife would not pose a challenge to the system. As a result, the joint headquarters led by the three women managed to mobilize and inspire the Belarusians with faith in the power of their voice, in their right not to obey rude pressure. Secondly, open disregard for women based on patriarchal approach, the cult of using force and coercion, brutal pressure on professional groups in which the majority are women - doctors and teachers, the transcendental violence against protesters angered women and led to the largest protest actions in the history of the country.

Even though Aleksander Lukashenko’s regime tried to undermine the protests since the very beginning, comparing them to Ukrainian Maidan, the rhetoric proved to be wrong. The Belarusian-style “revolution” is not a Ukrainian Maidan with burning tires. This is not an “Arab spring” or the Kremlin’s nightmare “color revolutions”. The protests in Belarus are not about changing the geopolitical orientation, like it was in Ukraine. They are neither anti, nor pro-Russian. Surveys conducted for many years show that the dominating majority (more than 70% of respondents) support the idea that Belarus should be a sovereign and independent state outside of any alliances. In fact, 98% of demonstrators joined the protests because of electoral fraud, use of violence and political repressions. And unlike Ukraine where there is political plurality, in Belarus there is no well-structured and strong opposition. Instead, there is something worse for this authoritarian regime: an awakened civil society. Given the circumstances, sooner or later a leader will emerge. However, this issue is not about leadership at the moment, but in the absolute unity of the society, which is equally covering the worker from the Belaz Automobile Plant, the IT freelancer and the soloist of the Minsk Philharmonic Choir. The Belarusian revolution has made everyone’s voice equal and strong “there is neither Jew nor Greek “, nor a proletarian, nor an intellectual. And this is an absolutely unique situation.

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Point of no return Belarusian population have reached a point of no-return, aligning people in their wish to change their leader. One by one, the protests in Belarus brought together all layers of society. In a short time, Lukashenko became a hostage to the social structure that he had preserved all these years, losing even the basis that he thought it’s his main supporter - the “working class”. A widespread wave of strikes in many factories critical to Belarusian economy was an unprecedented event that took the authorities by surprise. Another unpredictable event was the retirees rally, another pillar of Lukashenko’s electorate. Following the example of women and other workers, they marched through the streets carrying flowers and chanting for Lukashenko, who is 66 years old, to “go away!” and asking rhetorically “How many grandmas should it take to oust one grandpa?”. BullsEye


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