Los Angeles Times

Belarus’ leader shut out of London Olympics

Lukashenko is on the EU’S blacklist and has been denied entry to Britain, officials say.

- By Sergei L. Loiko sergei.loiko@latimes.com

MOSCOW — Belarusian President Alexander Lukashenko, viewed by many as Europe’s last dictator, has been denied entry to Britain and will not attend the London Olympics, officials said Wednesday.

Lukashenko, who also serves as head of the nation’s Olympic Committee, is on a list of people barred from European Union countries, Inna Romashevsk­aya, press secretary for the British Embassy in Minsk, told the Interfax-Zapad news agency.

“This ban also remains in force during the Olympic Games and this decision will not be changed,” Romashevsk­aya said.

The 57-year-old leader of the former Soviet republic of Belarus was blackliste­d by the European Union and the U.S. in 2006 for human rights violations.

The EU lifted the ban in 2008, but reinstated it in early 2011 following a government crackdown on opposition figures after Lukashenko’s disputed victory in the December 2010 presidenti­al election.

Poet and former presidenti­al candidate Vladimir Neklyayev, who was beaten and imprisoned after the election and remains under house arrest, said the visa denial shows “the rest of the world” that Europe is unhappy about its “one dictatorsh­ip.”

“This public humiliatio­n serves Lukashenko right,” he said in a phone interview from his home in Minsk, Belarus’ capital.

Lukashenko this year took a few steps toward appeasing the West and pardoned several key political opponents, including former Deputy Foreign Minister Andrei Sannikov, leader of the European Belarus movement.

Sannikov, who was released from prison in April after 16 months of captivity — four of those in solitary confinemen­t — is recuperati­ng in a hospital in neighborin­g Lithuania.

His wife, Irina Khalip, a reporter with the Russian newspaper Novaya Gazeta, said denying Lukashenko a visa was an appropriat­e way to deal with the Belarusian president.

“Lukashenko wanted so much to attend the Games that he even had a special Olympic suit manufactur­ed for him,” she said in a phone interview.

Lukashenko said this month that he expected the Belarusian team to win 20 to 25 medals in London, the Interfax news agency reported.

Also Wednesday, Alexander Zhukov, head of the Russian Olympic Committee, wrote in a Twitter post:

“The organizing committee of the London Olympic Games didn’t give an accreditat­ion to Belarus NOC [National Olympic Committee head] A. Lukashenko. Is sports outside politics?”

But the Internatio­nal Olympic Committee and organizers of the London Games reportedly denied that they had banned Lukashenko.

 ?? Sergei Supinsky ?? POLICE ARREST an activist from a Ukrainian women’s movement demonstrat­ing in Kiev against Belarusian President Alexander Lukashenko’s visit this month. Many consider Lukashenko Europe’s last dictator.
Sergei Supinsky POLICE ARREST an activist from a Ukrainian women’s movement demonstrat­ing in Kiev against Belarusian President Alexander Lukashenko’s visit this month. Many consider Lukashenko Europe’s last dictator.
 ?? Nikolai Petrov ?? PRESIDENT LUKASHENKO, right, attends an Independen­ce Day parade in Minsk, Belarus’ capital.
Nikolai Petrov PRESIDENT LUKASHENKO, right, attends an Independen­ce Day parade in Minsk, Belarus’ capital.

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