Staff

Staff

ANKARA (Reuters) - Turkish President Tayyip Erdogan upbraided French counterpart Emmanuel Macron on Tuesday over his comments last week pledging to fight "Islamist separatism", saying the remarks were "a clear provocation" and showed the French leader's "impertinence".

Macron had said "Islamist separatism" was threatening to take control in some Muslim communities in France and a bill on the issue would be sent to parliament with steps restricting home-schooling and encouraging teaching of Arabic.

"The 'Islam is in crisis' statement made by Macron in a city where Muslims are in the majority is beyond disrespectful, it is a clear provocation," Erdogan told an event celebrating mosques and religious personnel in Ankara.

Macron made his remarks during a visit to Les Mureaux, an impoverished northern suburb of Paris.

 

"Speaking about Islam's structuring as the leader of France is overstepping and impertinence," said Erdogan, who heads the Islamist-rooted AK Party. "Who are you to utter a phrase like Islam's structuring?"

Turkey and France are allies in NATO but have been at odds over a host of issues, from their policies in Syria and Libya to a dispute over Ankara's hydrocarbon exploration and maritime jurisdiction in the eastern Mediterranean.

Erdogan and Macron discussed the disagreements and bilateral ties during a phone call last month, following weeks of tensions in the eastern Mediterranean. The two men agreed to improve ties and keep communication channels open.

However, Erdogan said on Tuesday that Macron had disregarded their agreement with his comments, adding that labelling Muslims in France as separatists would lead to "major conflicts".

"Just as we agreed to improve our ties and dialogue about a week or 10 days ago, look at how quickly he forgot this," Erdogan said. "Him making this statement right after (our call) shows just how much respect he should be shown."

AMSTERDAM (Reuters) - The global chemical weapons watchdog, which has been asked by Germany to test samples of what Berlin says was a banned nerve agent used to poison a Russian opposition figure, said on Monday its experts would be prepared to assist Russia in the case.

The Organisation for the Prohibition of Chemical Weapons (OPCW) said it had received a request from Moscow on Oct. 1 for help in the case of Kremlin critic Alexei Navalny, and was seeking clarification on what type of assistance Russia wanted.

Navalny fell ill on a flight in Siberia on Aug. 20 and was flown to Germany for treatment. German doctors say blood tests show he was poisoned with the Soviet-era nerve agent Novichok. The OPCW has collected its own samples to test at Germany's request.

Russia has said it has seen no evidence Navalny was poisoned, and denies any role in any attack.

 

The OPCW said in a statement on Monday its "Technical Secretariat is ready to provide the requested expertise and that a team of experts could be deployed on short notice."

The Navalny case is expected to be discussed on the sidelines of a conference of member states at the OPCW starting on Tuesday.

Russia has in the past threatened to quit the agency, which was established to enforce the 1997 Chemical Weapons Convention. Moscow has accused it of pro-Western bias over its work in Syria, where Russia provides military backing to the government of President Bashar al-Assad.

As Bangladesh hosts over a million Rohingya refugees, what motivated the country to open up its borders?

Over 1.1 million Rohingyas continue to remain stranded in crowded camps in Bangladesh while the international community fails to provide a resolution to the crisis.

When in 2017 this lower-middle-income, majority Muslim country opened its borders to the Rohingya fleeing ethnic cleansing in Myanmar, they were largely welcomed. Bangladesh’s Prime Minister Sheikh Hasina stated back then: “We have the ability to feed 160 million people of Bangladesh and we have enough food security to feed the 700,000 refugees.”

It wasn’t just the government. Many private citizens came forward to offer assistance. Existing data indicates that 86% of residents in Teknaf, which is the closest administrative region to the Rakhine state from which most Rohingya originate, were involved in providing emergency relief and housing to the new arrivals.

In an era when many rich nations have tried to stop the entry of refugees, Bangladesh’s decision to accept refugees in the early days of the crisis could seem puzzling.

A scholar of refugees and forced migration, I spent the summer of 2019 in Bangladesh to understand the forces that shaped this initial humanitarian response.

Faith and morality

My ongoing research indicates that many factors played a critical role in Bangladesh’s political decision to host the Rohingya, including the country’s cultural and religious identity, which centers around ideas of community and responding to those in need.

Interviews conducted with political leaders, NGOs and local volunteers revealed that the shared Islamic faith and the Muslim identity of many of the Bangladeshis and the vast majority of the Rohingya galvanized humanitarian assistance in two specific ways.

First, the Islamic concepts of “zakat,” obligatory charity, which is one of the five pillars of Islam, and that of “sadaqa,” or voluntary charity, played crucial roles in motivating private citizens to offer emergency assistance. Both these concepts emphasize the imperative to give to those in need.

Religious leaders also used these concepts to encourage donations. In her 2019 address to the United Nations, Prime Minister Hasina referred to humanitarianism in Islam to explain her border policy.

Second, the fact that the Muslim Rohingya in particular were being persecuted because of their faith compounded the sense of urgency among those who identified as Muslim to assist the Rohingya.

While the vast majority of the Rohingya who fled to Bangladesh were Muslim, smaller numbers of Hindu and Christian Rohingya who arrived with the influx also received emergency assistance and shelter.

However, not all those who were interviewed invoked religion to explain their actions. A medical volunteer interviewed for the research said, “Why did we respond? Because it was … the moral thing to do, the humanitarian thing to do. Why shouldn’t we? The crisis had literally arrived at our house. How could we even think of turning them away?”

Role of culture and history

A recurrent theme in my research was the emphasis around Bangladeshi culture with its focus on sharing one’s resources with others in need. Furthermore, like many other countries in Latin America, Asia, Africa, and Oceania, which are commonly referred to as the global south, Bangladesh has historically had a fluid border – with Myanmar and India.

People move across these borders for agricultural purposes. Marriages between Rohingya and Bangladeshis have been common, and the local population and the Rohingya are able to understand one another’s languages.

According to a 2018 survey, 81% of respondents believed that the local integration of the Rohingya is possible given that the vast majority of the local population and the Rohingya share many religious, cultural and linguistic practices.

Memories of past trauma

The legacy of a painful past also played a role for many Bangladeshis. In 1971, during Bangladesh’s war of independence from then West Pakistan (now Pakistan) 10 million Bengalis sought refuge in India to escape a campaign of genocide by the then West Pakistan military.

A number of those interviewed for my research underscored the historical memory of this event as being a catalyst for explaining Bangladesh’s decision to open its borders.

Prime Minister Hasina invoked this history in her 2017 address at the United Nations. She talked about her own experience as a refugee following the 1975 assassination of her father, Sheikh Mujibur Rahman. Known as the “Father of the Nation,” Mujibur Rahman played a key role in Bangladeshi’s independence movement.

A researcher of Bangladesh’s independence struggle stated, “The loss she suffered with the assassination of her whole family except her one sister who was abroad at the time, and the inability to return to her country following the tragedy has had a lasting impact on her life … something about the desperation of those people connected with her on a very personal level and she wanted to do something to help.”

Leadership in uncertain times

In recent years, Bangladesh has demonstrated a growing interest in matters of international peace and security. It has received awards from the United Nations for fighting climate change and meeting goals of its immunization program, and it remains the largest contributor to U.N. peacekeeping operations.

Since 2017, Bangladesh has submitted three proposals at the United Nations General Assembly to address the Rohingya crisis, including in 2019, drawing support from Rohingya activists.

Bangladesh, however, is not a state party to the 1951 Refugee Convention, the post-World War II legal document that defines the term “refugee,” the obligations of states to protect them, including not returning any individual to a country where they would face torture, or degrading treatment.

Instead, Bangladesh refers to the Rohingya as Forcibly Displaced Myanmar Nationals (FDMNs). This means that, officially, the Rohingya do not have a legally protected status in Bangladesh.

Nevertheless, low-and middle-income countries like Pakistan and Bangladesh, which are not state parties to the convention, are among the largest refugee-hosting countries in the world.

Disproportionate burden

However, in recent times, as the Rohingya situation becomes more protracted, Bangladesh is starting to face internal tensions as prospects for repatriation become less likely.

The large refugee population has imposed significant infrastructural, social, financial and environmental pressures and has raised concerns about land insecurity – a serious issue in an overpopulated country.

My research further indicated that the significant presence of international NGOs in the Cox’s Bazar area, home to the world’s largest refugee camp, is impacting the local economy by driving up prices. Local tensions have emerged over government and international aid that has been largely geared toward the Rohingya.

In a change of tone, at a three-day Dhaka Global Dialogue in 2019, Prime Minister Hasina referred to the Rohingya as a “threat to the security” of the region. In 2020, Bangladesh began building barbed-wire fencing and installing watchtowers around the camps, citing security concerns. A restriction on access to high-speed internet in the camps was imposed but recently lifted.

With the emergence of COVID-19 in the camps, additional challenges have emerged. These have included the spread of infection in cramped camps that lack access to water and testing as well as limited understanding about the virus.

Meanwhile, Myanmar’s reluctance to ensure a safe return for the Rohingya, and the realities of COVID-19, have made the prospects of repatriation increasingly dim.

As Bangladesh grapples with the pandemic while serving as one of the world’s largest refugee host countries, it serves as a reminder of the disproportionate responsibility carried by low-income countries of hosting refugees and the challenges therein./ The Conversation  

ISTANBUL 

Egypt executed 15 political detainees over the weekend in an effort to spread fear among demonstrators as protests underway since Sept. 19 began spreading to other cities.

President Abdel Fattah al-Sisi approved the execution of 15 people who were previously sentenced to death by the courts. The move comes as demonstrations are spreading in rural areas and city slums.

Two members of the Muslim Brotherhood who were arrested in anti-coup demonstrations in Alexandria in August 2013 were executed a day after protests were held on Oct. 2.

While no statement was made by the authorities, TV channels and human rights organizations announced the executions to the public.

We Record, a London-based NGO, said that Yasser al-Abasiri, 49, and Yasser Shukr, 45, who were detained in Torah Prison, were executed.

The next day, the regime executed 13 more people. The authorities have not yet announced their names to the public, according to Watan TV, an Egyptian channel known for being close to the Muslim Brotherhood that broadcasts from abroad.

The executions were confirmed on TV channels belonging to opposition groups such as Mekameleen and Al-Sharq which broadcast outside of Egypt and are mostly watched by Egyptians.

The Al-Sharq channel aired detailed information on the 13 people who were executed and reported that their relatives were asked to go to the morgue at Zenhom Hospital in Cairo to retrieve their bodies.

- Attempt to instil fear on the streets

The al-Sisi administration was worried over the "September Uprising" which started on Sept. 19 as a result of calls by Mohammed Ali, an opposition figure living in exile in Spain.


Demonstrations were first staged in villages and city slums and then spread to cities throughout the country.

The regime, which initially did not take the demonstrations seriously, began using force after increasing participation in the "Friday of Rage" and "Friday of Triumph" protests.
This led to the killing of three activists by the police on Sept. 25, but the anger on the streets did not fade.

Fearing that the protests which started for economic reasons could spread further, the administration launched plan B to execute 50 prisoners who had previously been sentenced to death by the courts.

As of Saturday, most Muslim Brotherhood members were waiting for the execution of the 50 defendants after all legal remedies were exhausted.

The al-Sisi administration has executed 15 prisoners in the last two days, holding the remainder in reserve to execute in another crisis.

According to Egyptian law, the power to implement death sentences or acquit the defendants belongs only to the president.

Thirty-five political defendants who have been tried and sentenced to death in different cases await execution in prisons.

- Nine prisoners executed in February 2019

Since al-Sisi took power, courts across the country have issued death sentences against hundreds of opponents of the regime, but most of the verdicts were overturned.

A final death sentence was given to 92 defendants in Egypt. The al-Sisi administration increased the number of prisoners executed to 42 by carrying out the sentences of nine dissidents on Feb. 20, 2019.

The 15 people executed in the last two days raised the total count to 57, while the remaining 35 death row inmates are counting the days to their execution.

Meanwhile, the courts continue to issue death sentences. On Sept. 30, six defendants were sentenced to death.

GENEVA 

Sticking by its announcement this May that it would leave the World Health Organization (WHO), the US said Monday that it will continue to promote WHO reforms to strengthen "transparency and accountability" for the UN agency.

"Consistent with our long-standing policy, the US will continue promoting reforms that strengthen transparency and accountability at every international organization, including the WHO," US Assistant Health Secretary Brett Giroir told a special 34-member WHO executive board meeting on COVID-19 in Geneva.

"We cannot overcome the failure of any member states to provide accurate, complete, and timely information on outbreaks and potential health emergencies," he said, in what was seen as a reference to China.

At the start of the meeting, WHO Director-General Tedros Ghebreyesus noted that there are almost 35 million COVID-19 cases now reported to the WHO, with over 1 million fatalities.

"The real number is certainly higher.

"Although all countries have been affected by this virus, we must remember that this is an uneven pandemic," said Tedros.

The WHO chief noted that 10 countries account for 70% of all reported cases and deaths, and just three countries account for half – without naming the US, India, and Brazil as the countries with the highest number of cases.

US withdrawal

On May 29, US President Donald Trump announced that the US was ending its relationship with the WHO following a months-long review he had ordered.

The action, Trump said, was taken "because they [WHO] have failed to make the requested and greatly needed reforms," and comes amid Trump’s general trend of disdaining international groups the US is part of.

"We will be today terminating our relationship with the WHO, and redirecting those funds to other worldwide and deserving urgent global public health needs," Trump added.

Trump continued to insist China had "total control" over the WHO, claiming "Chinese officials ignored their reporting obligations" to the health body during the pandemic, and "pressured" it to "mislead the world."

On Monday, Giroir was joined by the EU and Australia in calling for the start of an international WHO-led mission to China to evaluate the origin of the novel coronavirus.

Russian vaccine

At Monday's meeting, Russia's Vice Health Minister Alexandra Dronova said the executive board needed to clarify the US position.

"We need to analyze legal procedures and administrative and financial procedures regarding steps taken by the US against the WHO," she said.

Dronova also spoke on Russia's development of a vaccine against the coronavirus and asked for an "impartial assessment" of its COVID-19 vaccine under development.

On Aug. 9, the WHO said it was following Russia's progress in developing a COVID-19 vaccine, but cautioned that progress in fighting the virus should not compromise safety after some scientists had said it was being rushed.

"We also have a series of innovative medicines, and also the first vaccine in the world to be created against COVID-19 was made by Russia," said Dronova.

She said Russia had provided information regarding its vaccine called Sputnik V.

"We ask you to look at an impartial assessment of measures to respond to COVID-19," said Dronova, asking Tedros to provide a plan for WHO member states carrying out such an assessment.

Dr. Mike Ryan, the WHO's head of emergencies, said in the meeting that about 10% of the world's population might have already been infected with COVID-19.

"The vast majority of the world remains at risk," Ryan added./aa

ANKARA(AA) 

Turkey on Monday accused French President Emmanuel Macron of "encouraging Islamophobia" with his recent remarks claiming that "Islam is in crisis".

"The claim by President Macron that 'Islam is in crisis' is a dangerous and provocative statement, encouraging Islamophobia and anti-Muslim demagoguery," presidential spokesman Ibrahim Kalin wrote on Twitter.

"Making Islam and Muslims a scapegoat for the failures of the French Republic is a far cry from rational policy," Kalin added.

Last Friday, Macron announced a controversial plan against so-called "Islamist separatism" in the country.

In a speech, Macron claimed that Islam is a religion that is "experiencing a crisis across the world".

Yasin Aktay

Fresh tensions in the Karabakh region, which started with Armenia’s attacks on Azerbaijan's civilian targets in July, led to global surprise when Azerbaijan made an unexpected countermove for the first time in the history of the Armenian occupation, which has been ongoing for 28 years.

It appears that Armenia, whose aggressive attitude has become a habit, was not expecting this countermove; France and the other countries that provoked and supported it to a certain extent caught off guard too. Despite the fact that it is globally acknowledged that the Karabakh region belongs to Azerbaijan and that Armenia is there as occupying force, according to the law based on valid international agreements and UN decisions, neither these resolutions nor this law bind Armenia. Its invasion is almost treated with understanding, and no sanctions have been imposed against Yerevan.

Yet, Armenia's occupation of Karabakh took place exactly after Saddam Hussein attempted to invade Kuwait with a fait accompli and, upon this, drew reaction from the international community. A state's occupation of a country weaker than itself by trusting its armed forces during that time would be classified as a mistake that the so-called "new world order" could never accept. The new international order they are trying to establish under U.S. leadership would not tolerate such invasions, and would not let their perpetrators get away with it. The international war-sanction activated against Iraq had taught everybody a lesson about this said order.

However, the Armenian occupation and the Khojaly massacre that took place only a couple of years later, went down in records as an example that the new world order’s dominion had been suspended. Yet, this dominion remained suspended until the most ruthless genocide happened against the Muslims in Bosnia after World War II.

In both examples, Muslims were weak – perhaps not in population but in terms of weapons. When the Khojaly massacre was taking place in Azerbaijan, it is known that then-President Ebulfeyz Elçibey requested four helicopters from Turkey, which was its sole safe harbor; while the Armenians were superior with respect to weapons because they were getting support from all over the world. Turkey was not in a position to provide Azerbaijan with the aid Elçibey had requested back then, or it chose not to do so. Thus, the Azerbaijanis suffered a brutal massacre and a part of the country was invaded.

Since then, the Karabakh issue remains as a problem that cannot be overcome under Armenian occupation. However, an international group was even established to find a resolution to this problem. The members of the group named “Minsk” are primarily Azerbaijan and Armenia, the sides of the conflict, and Turkey, the U.S., Russia, France, Belarus, Germany, Italy, Portugal, the Netherlands, Sweden, and Finland. The group is to today still officially in existence.

Its objective was to determine a suitable frame for the resolution of the dispute in aims to secure the negotiation process, to reach an agreement with respect to stopping the armed clashes in order to allow the Minsk Conference to assemble, and support the peace process by deploying the Organization for Security and Co-operation in Europe (OSCE), the multinational peacekeeping force. Despite 28 years passing since its establishment, this group has failed to make any progress whatsoever. On the contrary, the Armenian occupation further deepened; and as efforts have been made to render the Armenian settlements there even more permanent over time, the matter has become almost impossible to solve.

Now, as the surprising operation Azerbaijan launched against Armenian attacks seems to be making headway in resolving the Karabakh matter, cries are reverberating across the globe. Peaceful calls are being made to solve the matter through diplomacy. The Western countries, from which we heard nothing against the occupation that has been ongoing for years, are now conveying that a diplomatic solution is the only way.

Which diplomatic solution?

Why and how will those who didn’t bother to lift a finger until now for the occupation that has been ongoing for 28 years suggest a solution after all this time?

The sole effect of a diplomatic solution so far has been to buy time to further consolidate the occupation and ensure that it becomes physically permanent.

Turkish President Recep Tayyip Erdoğan clearly revealed his attitude and approach regarding this matter. His words were clear enough to be understood by everyone in today’s world order: In order to achieve results diplomatically, one needs to be strong in the field as well. If you do not have the strength to defend yourself against the physical injustices faced on every front, nobody will bother to give you what is truly your right.

Therefore, the problems that have been ongoing years, or rather the power balances established over those problematic divisions, are now being overturned because Turkey showed its strength in Syria, in Libya, and in the Mediterranean. It is leading everybody to review their strategies.

And we repeat: Turkey does not demand more than its due right; it does not have its sights set on another’s rights or share. It respects everybody’s rights, but it is also against having its own rights trampled upon. This is the logic behind its actions.

The Jamaat-e-Islami’s vice-amir and head of its foreign affairs department, Abdul Ghaffar Aziz, passed away in Lahore today Monday, October 5, 2020. He had been battling cancer for the past year.

The party’s information secretary Qaiser Shareef announced the news on Twitter. His funeral will be held at 1:45pm on Monday at Lahore’s Mansoora Mosque.

Aziz has left behind a widow, two sons and two daughters.

Almujtama” magazine " and its editor-in-chief, Mr. Muhammad Salem Al-Rashed, offer sincere condolences and sympathy to the family of Dr. Abdul Ghaffar Aziz, asking Allah to grant him His mercy, and to inspire his family and his relatives patience and solace.

(Reuters) - Schools, libraries, mosques and other public institutions in Tehran were closed for a week on Saturday as part of measures to stem a rapid rise in COVID-19 cases, state media cited authorities in the Iranian capital as saying.

The closure plan, which will also affect universities, seminaries, libraries, museums, theatres, gyms, cafes and hair salons in the Iranian capital, came after Alireza Zali, head of the Tehran Coronavirus Taskforce, called for the shutdown to help control the epidemic.

Zali warned in an interview on state television that if the spread of the epidemic continues at the current rate in Tehran, there would be a three- to five-fold increase in cases and a rise in the fatality rate to between 1.5% and 3%.

The lockdown which also applies to all social and cultural ceremonies and conferences will run to Friday Oct. 9.

 

Iran’s death toll from the coronavirus rose by 179 on Saturday to 26,746, and identified cases by 3,523 to 468,119, health ministry spokeswoman Sima Sadat Lari told state TV.

Iranian President Hassan Rouhani said anyone concealing a COVID-19 infection should face a severe penalty.

“Anyone who feels ill and it’s clear to them that they are ill, must not hide their illness,” Rouhani said in televised remarks. Otherwise, he added, they will be committing “the highest offense” that will demand “the highest punishment”.

Those not wearing a mask in public will be fined, said Rouhani, adding the amount of fines and other penalties will be determined at the next meeting of the government-run Coronavirus Taskforce.

Government employees who fail to observe regulations face measures ranging from warnings to their one-year suspension from their posts. And government offices where people go for services cannot serve people who do not observe health protocols, such as wearing masks.

Businesses that flout regulations could face closure.

Rouhani said penalties would be most severe in Tehran, where in recent weeks the daily death toll from the coronavirus has been more than 100 compared with less than 10 at the end of the first wave of the virus earlier this year, according to Zali.

Iran has registered more than 3,500 new cases in each of the past six days, with a record 3,825 cases announced on Thursday, official statistics showed.

Belarusian police on Sunday used water cannon to disperse protesters in the capital Minsk as tens of thousands marched to demand the release of political prisoners.

Demonstrators took to the streets despite warnings they could face prison and dedicated their latest march -- which came after Brussels and Washington introduced sanctions against some Belarusian officials -- to the plight of dozens of political prisoners.

Ahead of the march, the government sought to complicate media coverage of opposition rallies against strongman Alexander Lukashenko's regime, withdrawing the accreditation of all foreign journalists.

On Sunday, internet and cell phone services were disrupted.

 

But pictures and videos posted on social media showed huge crowds gathering in Minsk and protesters marching towards a detention centre, with some carrying portraits of victims of police abuse. 

Other protesters waved red-and-wite opposition flags and beat drums. 

"Set them free!" demonstrators chanted after they reached the notorious jail on Okrestin Street which some have dubbed a "torture chamber".

The opposition movement calling for an end to strongman Lukashenko's rule has kept up a series of large-scale demonstrations since his controversial election win on August 9, with 100,000 people or more taking to the streets every Sunday.

Since the start of the post-election crackdown in which several people have died, harrowing accounts have emerged of abuse in the Minsk jail. Many said they had been tortured, beaten and humiliated there. 

After the march had begun in the centre of the capital, police confirmed they had moved in on the protest, which like others was considered an illegal gathering.

Interior ministry spokeswoman Olga Chemodanova told AFP that water cannon had been used in Minsk and that there had been detentions, but provided no further details.


- 'Terrible screams' - 

Rights group Viasna said more than 100 demonstrators were detained in Minsk and elsewhere.

Protester Natalia Samotyia said she saw police beat up protesters. 

"I stood on a bridge and heard people's terrible screams," she told AFP. 

Another protester, Yakov Baranovsky, said police blasted him and another demonstrators with water cannon, forcing them to seek shelter.

"Everything has been done to make people disperse," the 51-year-old engineer said.

Belarusians this week received official text messages saying they could face criminal responsibility for taking part in "unsanctioned" rallies.

"Do not make a mistake!" the interior ministry said.

Ahead of the rally, the Nexta Live opposition Telegram channel, which has coordinated protesters and has more than two million subscribers, urged Belarusians to march towards the Minsk jail in support of political prisoners.

"These are people who have suffered for their convictions -- and are still suffering," Lukashenko's election rival Svetlana Tikhanovskaya said ahead of the protest. "Our task is to set them free."

According to Viasna, there are now 77 "political prisoners" in Belarus including Tikhanovskaya's husband and opposition blogger Sergei Tikhanovsky, who was not allowed to run for president, and senior opposition figure Maria Kolesnikova, who ripped up her passport to prevent authorities from deporting her.

Also on the list is Belarusian-US strategist Vitali Shkliarov, who worked on US Senator Bernie Sanders's presidential campaign and advised the Russian opposition. 

- Sanctions, counter-sanctions -

Russia has backed its longstanding ally Lukashenko, offering financial backing and promising military support if events turn against him.

On Friday, the United States and the European Union hit Belarus with long-awaited sanctions for rigging the vote and orchestrating the crackdown on protesters, targeting key officials -- but not Lukashenko himself. 

Minsk swiftly announced tit-for-tat "counter sanctions" against the EU, although it was not clear what form these would take or what or who they would target.

Tikhanovskaya ran in place of her jailed husband and claimed victory over Lukashenko. 

After taking shelter in EU member Lithuania, the 38-year-old political novice has been engaged in a diplomatic push to drum up support for the embattled Belarusian opposition.

She has met French President Emmanuel Macron and will travel to Germany for a meeting with Chancellor Angela Merkel on Tuesday.

Lukashenko, who has ruled ex-Soviet Belarus for 26 years, has accused Western countries and NATO of supporting protesters and trying to destabilise the country of 9.5 million./AFP

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