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Police, Protesters Clash In Belarus

Riot police and protesters clashed Saturday in the Belarusian capital, Minsk, with police setting off percussion grenades to try to disperse the crowd.

Police blocked marchers on a road, advancing toward them as they beat their shields with truncheons. Protesters screamed: "Fascists!"

Also, police on Saturday detained opposition leader Alexander Milinkevich, the Interfax news agency reported. However, Milinkevich told The Associated Press he had not been taken by police.

Earlier, police blocked off a central square where opposition leaders planned a rally Saturday over the disputed election in Belarus, pushing crowds away in a massive show of force meant to quash the persistent protests against President Alexander Lukashenko.

Tension mounted swiftly around Oktyabrskaya Square in central Minsk as large groups of police shoved the growing crowd of protesters back. Police buses brought reinforcements in full riot gear, and four trucks of the kind used to ferry detainees to jail pulled up nearby.

A crowd of a few hundred protesters pushed back to four corners of a major intersection near the square - where Lenin Street meets Independence Avenue - quickly swelled to some 3,000, including passers-by, but was matched by a mounting police presence.

Demonstrators shouted "Shame!" and "Long Live Belarus!" as police pushed them away from the square on a main street.

The tense scene came a day after police stormed a tent camp in Oktyabrskaya Square that had been the focus of round-the-clock protests over the March 19 election in which Lukashenko won a new five year-term by a landslide in a vote denounced as a farce by the opposition and criticized in the West as undemocratic.

Hundreds were arrested in the pre-dawn raid Friday. The tough response indicated the government had no intention of allowing the Saturday gathering during which Milinkevich planned to unveil a strategy to drive forward the call for a new election without Lukashenko's participation.

Speaking early Saturday outside the jail where many of the protesters were taken from the tent camp, Milinkevich vowed to press ahead with a major demonstration marking the anniversary of Belarus' first independence declaration in 1918.

"We're not planning any violence, any taking of the Bastille. We want a peaceful demonstration," he said, standing with his wife and about 100 relatives of detained activists. "I hope the authorities understand this."

Milinkevich said if the authorities do not let demonstrators gather, "we will look for another place." The jail is a few kilometers from the central square.

"I have survived war and a Nazi concentration camp, but what is happening here is even more outrageous," said Leonid, 70, a retiree standing near the square who declined to give his last name out of fear of retribution.

"We must overcome fear," he said.

"Today we will see a comedy, a farce," said Viktor, an unemployed 24-year-old who said many of his friends had been arrested when police stormed the tent camp and that one woman's whereabouts were unknown. Others were sentenced to 10-15 days in jail, he said.

An election-night protest attracted some 10,000 people - an enormous turnout in a country where police usually suppress unauthorized gatherings swiftly and brutally. Protesters raised the stakes at another rally Monday, setting up tents where hundreds stayed through the night and remained until the raid at 3 a.m. Friday.

Police arrested hundreds of people in connection with the protests, but their failure to break up the camp over several days raised opposition hopes of establishing a foothold. Those hopes ended when riot police stormed in, wrestling about 50 protesters into trucks and taking away hundreds of others who didn't resist.

Tension mounted again Friday evening as scores of opposition supporters holding flowers were pushed away by police who cleared the large square, pushing people off and detaining at least three, including a man who appeared to have been punched in the chin and a woman who struggled but was subdued by a dozen officers.

The European Union and the United States said Friday that they will impose sanctions on Lukashenko, who they say has turned Belarus into Europe's last dictatorship since his first election in 1994, and both called for an immediate end to the crackdown on the opposition.

EU leaders said the bloc would take "restrictive measures" against Lukashenko, including a likely travel ban and a possible freeze of Belarusian assets in Europe. The White House said the U.S. would act in unison with the EU.

Those measures seemed unlikely to influence Lukashenko, who despises the West and has allied his country with Russia. In a statement late Friday, the Foreign Ministry said the sanctions had "no prospects" and that Belarus reserves the right to take retaliatory measures.

A look at recent uprisings in former Soviet republics:

  • Azerbaijan: Opposition activists stage seven protests following Nov. 6, 2005, parliamentary elections won by President Ilham Aliev's ruling party won but criticized by international observers as falling below democratic standards. Some protesters wave orange flags, borrowing the color of Ukraine's protests months before, but opposition leaders are unable to marshal a sustained outpouring of discontent. The main opposition bloc later splinters when one party quits the alliance, bringing to an end a boycott of the new parliament.
  • Kyrgyzstan: Allegedly fraudulent parliamentary elections in February and March 2005 set off a wave of protests against longtime President Askar Akayev, culminating in a March 24 rally. Some 1,000 demonstrators seize the government headquarters in Bishkek and send Akayev fleeing. Kurmanbek Bakiyev, a former prime minister, is chosen as interim leader, then wins an overwhelming victory in July. The upheaval is dubbed the ``Tulip Revolution.''
  • Ukraine: Hundreds of thousands of demonstrators jam the streets of Kiev in late November and December 2004, setting up a tent city on the main avenue in the so-called ``Orange Revolution.'' The protests are sparked by presidential elections that are deemed fraudulent. A repeat runoff ordered by the Supreme Court results in opposition leader Viktor Yushchenko's election to the presidency.
  • Georgia: Two weeks of protests over parliamentary elections deemed fraudulent reach their climax on Nov. 22, 2003, when tens of thousands of protesters march through the Georgian capital in what comes to be known as the ``Rose Revolution.'' The opposition seizes parliament, chases out President Edvard Shevardnadze and declares an interim government. Opposition leader Mikhail Saakashvili later is elected president.
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