Belarus Dissenters Vow To Rally
Opposition Leaders Say Sat. Protest Set; Police Storm Tent Camp
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Belarusian police officers detain protesters as they storm the opposition tent camp in the Belarusian capital Minsk early Friday morning, March 24, 2006. (AP Photo/Ivan Sekretarev)
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Belarusian police officers leave a square of the opposition tent camp in the Belarusian capital Minsk early Friday morning, March 24, 2006. (AP Photo/Sergei Grits)
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A supporter of opposition leader Alexander Milinkevich fixes a banned Belarusian flag on a pole at a rally on a main square in central Minsk, Belarus, early Tuesday, March 21, 2006. (AP Photo/Alexander Zemlianichenko)
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Belarus' opposition leader Alexander Milinkevich, left, gestures as he greets his supporters during a rally on a main square in central Minsk, Belarus, Tuesday, March 21, 2006. (AP Photo/Alexander Zemlianichenko)
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Belarus President Alexander Lukashenko in a televised news conference, March 20, 2006. (AP)
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Photo Essay Belarus Election Protests Demonstrators protest President Alexander Lukashenko's victory in disputed election.
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Police raided an opposition tent camp on Minsk's main square before dawn Friday, arresting hundreds of demonstrators who had been part of unprecedented round-the-clock protests in this tightly controlled ex-Soviet state. It was the first time that Belarus' autocratic president allowed a pro-democracy demonstration to go on for so long, CBS News Moscow Bureau Chief Beth Knobel reports
Opposition supporters returned to the square at twilight Friday, but police seized some of them and pushed the rest of the small crowd down the street and prevented pedestrians on their way home from work from walking through the square.
The tough response, after days of allowing demonstrations, indicated police have no intention of allowing the Saturday gathering, during which opposition leader Alexander Milinkevich has said he plans to unveil a strategy to drive forward the call for new elections without Lukashenko's participation.
Lukashenko was declared the landslide winner of a third term in Sunday elections that the opposition says were wildly fraudulent and that European observers said were severely flawed. An election night protest attracted some 10,000 people, an enormous turnout in a country where police usually act swiftly and brutally to suppress unauthorized gatherings. Another rally on Monday raised the stakes when activists set up tents and stayed through the night, continuing there until the raid at 3 a.m. Friday.
Police arrested hundreds of people trying to deliver food to the encampment or for other protest-related offenses, but the failure of police to break up the camp over several days raised opposition hopes of establishing a foothold.
Those hopes ended when helmeted riot police stormed in, wrestling about 50 demonstrators into trucks and taking away hundreds of others who didn't resist.
First, journalists were asked to leave, Knobel reports. "Move behind the barriers, for your own safety," warned the police.
Within 25 minutes, the tent city was empty, Knobel reports, and city workers quickly cleared the debris. Those detained were taken to police stations, where many of the women were released. The others face fines, or jail time, Knobel reports.
Opposition youth movement member Nikolai Ilyin, 21, said he and other demonstrators, many of them with only socks on their feet because they had been sleeping, were taken to a Minsk jail.
"Many people were made to stand in stockinged feet in the snow for two hours. We were made to stand against a wall with our hands up, and those who would turn their heads or say something were punched in their kidneys," Ilyin said. He said he fainted and was hospitalized, then fled the hospital.
©MMVI CBS Broadcasting Inc. All Rights Reserved. This material may not be published, broadcast, rewritten, or redistributed. The Associated Press contributed to this report.
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