Europe’s longest-serving leader won re-election in a contest widely believe to have been rigged. The result cements the power of a leader whose country is considered Russia’s staunchest ally.
Europe’s longest-serving leader, President Aleksandr G. Lukashenko of Belarus, cruised to his seventh election victory in a row on Sunday in a contest that his exiled opponents dismissed as a sham whose only purpose was to cement his autocratic grip on the former Soviet republic, Russia’s closest ally.
“Don’t use the word election to describe this farce,” said Svetlana Tikhanovskaya, an opposition leader who fled Belarus after the country’s previous presidential vote in 2020 and a brutal crackdown on nationwide protests over election fraud. “It is a staged performance by Lukashenko to cling to power at any cost.”
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Official results released early Monday awarded Mr. Lukashenko yet another landslide victory with 86.82 percent of the vote. That is even more than the 81 percent he claimed in the contested 2020 election — a result that his opponents and Western governments dismissed as implausibly high, and that set off huge street protests.
With dissenting voices inside the country silenced by Mr. Lukashenko’s expansive security apparatus, there is little chance of protests this time.
Unlike in 2020, when Ms. Tikhanovskaya was allowed to run against Mr. Lukashenko and declared herself the winner, Sunday’s election was a tightly controlled and tame affair, featuring only candidates loyal to the president. None expressed any desire to actually defeat Mr. Lukashenko, who has ruled Belarus with an iron fist since 1994.
Ms. Tikhanovskaya, out of the country since 2020, did not take part in Sunday’s election and was instead in Warsaw, leading a protest against Mr. Lukashenko, who mocked her efforts and claimed that President Trump had cut off funding to her opposition movement in exile. He appeared to be referring to an executive order last week that halted virtually all foreign aid for a 90-day reassessment period.
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