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Kremlin urges Belarus to free detained Russians

The Kremlin has demanded that Belarus quickly releases 33 Russian private security contractors detained on terrorism charges, dismissing the accusations as bogus.

Belarusian officials said the employees of private Russian military contractor Wagner are facing a criminal probe on charges of plotting terror attacks in Belarus amid the country’s presidential election campaign. The contractors were detained on Wednesday.

The allegations represent an unprecedented escalation of tensions between Russia and Belarus, traditionally close allies, as Belarus President Alexander Lukashenko seeks a sixth term in the August 9 election.

More than 30 detained employees of private Russian military contractor Wagner are facing a criminal probe
More than 30 detained employees of private Russian military contractor Wagner are facing a criminal probe (Belarusian KGB, State TV and Radio Company of Belarus via AP)

Independent observers and opposition supporters in Belarus see the detention of the Russians as part of Mr Lukashenko’s efforts to shore up sagging public support.

The Kremlin, which first reacted cautiously to Belarus’s move, has toughened its stance. Kremlin spokesman Dmitry Peskov said Russia expects Belarus to quickly free the detainees.

“The unwarranted detention of the 33 Russian citizens doesn’t fit into the framework of the allied relations,” Mr Peskov said during a conference call with reporters. “We expect our Belarusian allies to clear up this incident in the nearest time and release our citizens.”

Mr Peskov said members of a Russian security firm were en route to an unspecified country and missed a connecting flight to Istanbul at the Belarusian capital’s airport. “They have done nothing wrong and carried no illegal items,” he added.

Alexander Lukashenko, right
Belarus President Alexander Lukashenko, right, is seeking re-election (Nikolai Petrov/BelTA Pool Photo via AP)

The Wagner company is linked to Yevgeny Prigozhin, a Russian businessman who was indicted in the United States for meddling in the 2016 US presidential election. The firm has allegedly deployed hundreds of military contractors to eastern Ukraine, Syria and Libya.

Many observers have pointed out that Belarus long has provided a transit corridor for sensitive Russian operations abroad, alleging that Mr Lukashenko is now trying to use a routine Russian deployment for his own political gain.

Throughout his 26 years as president, Mr Lukashenko, a former collective farm director, has relied on Russian subsidies to keep the nation’s Soviet-style economy running but resisted Moscow’s push for closer integration of the neighbouring nations. He frequently accused the Kremlin of harbouring plans to incorporate Belarus and vowed to resist them.

The 65-year-old Belarusian leader is campaigning to retain his post amid a wave of opposition protests driven by public weariness with his iron-fisted rule and bruising economic damage from the coronavirus pandemic.

Election officials have denied candidate registration to his two main challengers, one of whom was jailed. The other fled to Russia with his children.

Svetlana Tikhanovskaya
Svetlana Tikhanovskaya, centre, is a candidate for the presidential elections and wife of an opposition blogger (AP/Sergei Grits)

The opposition has united behind a third candidate, Svetlana Tikhanovskaya, the wife of a jailed opposition blogger. On Thursday, Belarus’s Investigative Committee linked the detained Russians to her husband as part of a criminal investigation into alleged preparations for staging “mass riots”.

Speaking at a rally in Minsk that drew tens of thousands of people in the biggest demonstration since the presidential campaign’s start, Ms Tikhanovskaya dismissed the charges against her husband as a crude fabrication.