Putin Says His Men Are Standing by Ready to Go into Belarus If Protests ‘Get Out of Hand’

Putin Says His Men Are Standing by Ready to Go into Belarus If Protests ‘Get Out of Hand’

27 Aug    Finance News
Sputnik/Aleksey Nikolskyi/Kremlin via Reuters
Sputnik/Aleksey Nikolskyi/Kremlin via Reuters

Vladimir Putin says he has formed a reserve of law enforcement officers to send to Belarus to help president Alexander Lukashenko if necessary, Russian media reported on Thursday.

Putin said he will not deploy these forces unless “extremist elements in Belarus cross a line and start plundering.”

Speaking to the state-run Rossia 1 broadcaster, he said the law enforcement agents would be on standby in case pro-democracy protests strengthened.

“We’ve agreed that [the reserve] will not be used until the situation starts getting out of control,” Putin said, according to The Moscow Times.

Earlier in the week, Russian media reported that Putin had offered to help, but it was yet unclear in what way.

The Washington Post reported Wednesday that Russian journalists replaced striking Belarus journalists at the country’s state television station in mid-August, and have been spreading Russian propaganda ever since. The Belarus journalists who walked off the job have not been allowed to return, creating a vaccum which likely helped fuel Lukashenko’s highly-contested presidential win which sparked country-wide protests calling for his ouster.

The Belarus population has long been anti-Russia, with a recent poll showing that 93 percent of the population against Russia taking over the country, but Lukashenko has been demonstrably pro-Putin.

When protests raged after Lukashenko’s suspicious reelection against the popular opposition candidate Sviatlana Tsikhanouskaya, who has become the figurehead of the protests and a target of Russian misinformation.

Read more at The Daily Beast.

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