VERSIONS: روسيا اليوم NOTICIAS FREEVIDEO ИНОТВ RTД FIND US ON: YouTube Twitter
breakingnews
Go to main page   Politics   Eurobsession with Belarus  
MORE ON THE STORY
27.02.2009, 13:10 1 comment

Is Europe blackmailing Belarus?

Will the EU allow Belarus to join its ‘Eastern Partnership’ program without any preconditions? Comments by some European officials suggest that may not be the case.

16.03.2009, 16:35 1 comment

Travel ban waiver for Belarus President prolonged

EU foreign ministers confirmed they are not going to put back in force travel restrictions against dozens of Belarusian officials including President Lukashenko, which were lifted five months ago.

AFP Photo / Belta / Nikolay Petrov 23.06.2009, 23:30

EU commissioner seeks reforms in Belarus

Benita Ferrero-Waldner, European Commissioner for External Relations and European Neighbourhood Policy, called her meeting with Belarusian leader Aleksandr Lukashenko “very productive.”

SWEDEN, STOCKHOLM : L to R: Russian President Dmitry Medvedev, Swedish Prime Minister Fredrik Reinfeldt, President of the European Commission Jose Manuel Barroso in Stockholm on November 18, 2009. (AFP Photo / Ria Novosti / Kremlin Pool / Vladimir Rodionov) 25.11.2009, 13:32 2 comments

Moscow positive about final pre-Lisbon Russia-EU summit

Moscow has hailed the results the Russia-EU summit last week as positive, namely the signing of agreements concerning a cross-border cooperation program, said Russian Foreign Ministry spokesman Andrey Nesterenko.

Members of the unauthorized procession of the Belarusian opposition Day of Liberty in the center of Minsk (RIA Novosti / Andrei Aleksandrov) 21.10.2010, 18:30 24 comments

Belarusian opposition march to elections “in different columns”

As the Belarusian opposition considers uniting before the presidential election, Aleksandr Lukashenko has said that disagreements with Russia will be overcome.

RIA Novosti / Sergey Guneev 20.10.2010, 17:25 8 comments

Belarus’ new geopolitical accents

The Belarusian leader defines geopolitical priorities as another presidential candidate speaks in favor of closer ties with the EU and NATO and against Russian as a state language.

Aleksandr Lukashenko (AFP Photo / Alexander Nemenov) 19.03.2009, 14:39 1 comment

Belarus’ president seems less content with Europe

Ongoing contact between European institutions and the Belarusian opposition seem to irritate the Belarusian leader to such an extent that he is ready to make changes to his pro-European agenda.

08.05.2009, 00:20 1 comment

Eastern partnership summit: better to be an onlooker?

Based upon the number of missing invitees, the Eastern Partnership summit in Prague has been comparable to a dull university lection. Almost all major EU leaders thought they’d better stay at home.

 Aleksandr Lukashenko 15.04.2010, 17:21 9 comments

Belarus regrets having no nukes

President Aleksandr Lukashenko, offended for not being invited to Washington’s nuclear security summit, noted that Belarus possesses hundreds of kilos of highly-enriched uranium and is not going to get rid of it.

15.10.2010, 19:55 3 comments

Interests of Russian and Belarusian people “most important” - Putin

The vital interests of brotherly peoples count most in relations between Russia and Belarus, despite all current possible problems, Prime Minister Vladimir Putin has said.

Eurobsession with Belarus

Published: 20 February, 2009, 20:53

TAGS: EU, Politics, Belarus


It is a thing of the past when Belarusian authorities’ fond hope was to meet political heavyweights of Europe. Now it is the European politicians who are lining up in queues to visit Belarus and talk to its president.

Earlier in the week it was the PACE delegation and the EU foreign policy chief Javier Solana (the first visit of such a high-ranking European official to Belarus!). On Friday Belarusian capital Minsk welcomed the representatives of the EU parliament.

The Eurodeputies met with representatives of the civil society, political parties and independent media, but never got a chance to talk to Belarusian president Aleksandr Lukashenko or foreign minister Sergey Martynov. Probably, the top Belarusian officials were tired after previous meetings, which certainly did have an effect on them.

The delegation from the Council of Europe Parliamentary Assembly has been the first to come to Minsk this week. The main intrigue of the visit was whether Belarus gets more chances to regain special guest status in PACE. Minsk filed an application several years ago, but for obvious reasons there has been no answer so far. As soon as Belarus renewed her attempts to get on track with the EU the door opened again.

The PACE will decide on Belarusian status in June and the visitors made it clear that there will be only one condition for a positive vote. Belarus must agree to include opposition representatives into its delegation to PACE. However, the head of the PACE political committee Goran Lindblad did not explain how it could be done technically. The representatives of the countries must be elected within their parliament, or appointed from amongst the members of that parliament, but there is no opposition in any of the current Belarusian chambers. However, at that point PACE representatives waived a farewell leaving Belarusian officials deep in contemplation.

The EU foreign policy chief Javier Solana, on the contrary, did not lay down any conditions. He said that he came not to “dictate terms” and added that nothing is kept secret between EU and Belarus.


Aleksandr Lukashenko(AFP Photo / Pool / Natalia
Kolesnikova)

Obviously, these were the words Belarusian president Aleksandr Lukashenko wanted to hear most of all. Just on Tuesday, a day before Solana arrived, Lukashenko had insisted on removing any intermediaries from the Belarus-Europe dialogue. Belarusian leader said that Minsk and Brussels have already approved bilateral agenda and no opposition requirements could change it.

“Opposition will not wheedle anything out of us with help of the EU or the US”, he claimed. It is believed that these tough statements were the reason why Solana unexpectedly decided to go to Minsk overnight and talk to the Belarusian president personally.

It was a very positive sign for Belarus when Javier Solana highly appreciated Lukashenko’s desire to communicate with the EU without intermediaries. Solana also said that EU and Belarus are moving in right direction, which is clearly the “Eastern partnership” program. The program is the framework of EU planned policies towards some ex-Soviet countries, including Moldova, Ukraine, Georgia, Armenia and Azerbaijan. Europe was ready to include Belarus into this program under some conditions, but now it seems that Belarusian hard-headedness has begun to bear its fruit. At least, this time it was Belarus that confirmed its will to take part in the “Eastern partnership” program and Solana who expressed hope that everything will be arranged properly. Belarusians are saying that there is no need to pay the British PR-manager Timothy Bell who promotes Belarusian image in the West. Javier Solana will do his work much better and for free.

According to Solana, Belarusian foreign affairs minister Sergey Martynov is to visit Rome and other European capitals in the nearest future. In March there will be the third meeting of the EU Troika with Belarusian officials. The Czech Republic earlier said it planned to invite Aleksandr Lukashenko to the next EU summit, to be held in Prague this spring. The intensification of Belarus-Europe contacts does not mean that Belarus will get all the benefits promised by the European Union, but one thing is certain – Belarus is getting more and more European.

Darya Sologub for RT

+11 (15 votes)
 
Back to top
next MORE NEWS
20.02.2009, 20:34

Latvian government submits resignation in the midst of weak economic performance

Latvian President Valdis Zatlers has accepted the resignation of the country's Prime Minister, Ivars Godmanis, amid the ongoing economic crisis in the Baltic state.

20.02.2009, 21:04

Torn apart: Russia’s disputed territories

Being the largest country in the world, uniting dozens of nationalities and cultures, stretching over eleven time zones, Russia is fertile ground for territorial disputes.