Wednesday, September 23, 2020

Protests Taking Place In Minsk After Lukashenko’s ‘Secret’ Inauguration
BelarusFeed 2020-09-23

The inauguration of Alexander Lukashenko took place suddenly in Minsk on Wednesday, 23 September. Although presidential inaugurations are normally publicised well in advance as major state occasions, the date and location of the event was not disclosed.

In the morning security forces and officials were spotted next to the Palace of Independence. At some point, avenues were sealed off and roads blocked as Lukashenko’s motorcade raced through the city. The sudden move prompted spontaneous protests in different parts of Minsk.


Dzerzhinsky Avenue


Independence Avenue

Students also took to streets in protest. Young people with banners were spotted at the Belarusian State University of Culture and Arts and in the courtyard of the main building of the Belarusian State University (BSU).

Students of the University of Culture are chanting: “Sasha, come out, we will congratulate!”.

Several dozen people formed a human chain near the Kaskad residential complex, soon people in civilian clothes with cameras arrived and the protesters dispersed. Only a woman with a child remained.


Near the Kaskad residential complex


Near Minsk-Arena


The intersection of Yesenin and Rafiev Streets

Meanwhile, reports are coming in that evening classes are canceled or postponed at BSU and BSEU, some business centers and state enterprises finish their work at 6 pm [they are urgently sent home], closure of central metro stations and shutdown of mobile internet after 6 pm are expected.

Recall that mass protests demanding that Lukashenko resign have rocked the country daily since last month’s election, with the largest rallies in Belarus’s capital attracting up to 200,000 people.

Source: TUT.BY


Tsikhanouskaya: ‘People refused to give new mandate to Lukashenka’

Belarusian opposition leader Svyatlana Tsikhanovskaya has made a comment on Alyaksandr Lukashenka’s swearing-in that took place today. State-run Belarusian media spread the news only after the start of the ceremony, at about 11.30 (local time).

According to Tsikhanouskaya, the head of state ‘has just retired’.

“This attempt to recognise himself as legitimate has resulted in merely completing his previous office; ” the oppositionist said.

Lukashenka sworn-in at unannounced inauguration ceremony in Minsk

As Lukashenka’s orders to the security forces are no longer legitimate, they shall not be executed, Tsikhanouskaya stressed. She also called herself the only legitimate leader of Belarus.

Mentioning her recent visit to Brussels, the politician said that European countries showed support the Belarusian people who demand to put an end to the abyss of violence and lawlessness. The EU is ready to provide assistance to Belarus, Tsikhanouskaya noted.

“There are solid investment packages that are envisaged for Belarus after the victory of democracy,” she added.

In the wake of the unexpected inauguration, Minskers started to take to the streets, some persons have been detained.

Response to Lukashenka’s secret inauguration: Off-the-cuff protests in Minsk

According to the Belarusian Central Election Commission, 80.1% of voters supported Alyaksandr Lukashenka in the 2020 presidential election. Belarusian officials state that his strongest opponent Svyatlana Tsikhanouskaya got 10.12% of votes. However, on the back of announcing the results of the official exit polls, Belarusians started to take to the streets, claiming that their votes were stolen.

Belsat.eu


Five European countries refuse to recognize Lukashenko's legitimacy
His "secret inauguration" was called illegitimate and contradictory to democratic principles 
September 23, 2020
Source : 112 Ukraine

President of Belarus Alexander Lukashenko
AP

Authorities of Germany, Latvia, Lithuania, Slovakia, and Estonia have not recognized Alexander Lukashenko as head of the Republic of Belarus. The relevant statements have been posted on Twitter.

"Lukashenko is responsible for the presidential elections in Belarus which were neither free nor fair. Slovakia supports the citizens of Belarus," Slovak Foreign Minister Ivan Korcok said.

In his turn, Estonian Foreign Minister Urmas Reinsalu called Lukashenko's inauguration illegitimate and contradictory to democratic principles.

"Today's illegitimate inauguration of Lukashenko goes against all principles of democracy. Lukashenko has clearly lost his mandate. We call upon free and fair elections for people of Belarus to get the president they deserve," stated the Estonian minister.

Related: EU agrees sanctions against 40 Belarusian officials; Lukashenko out of list

Latvian Foreign Minister Edgar Rinkevics said that Alexander Lukashenko's "secret inauguration" did not give legitimacy to the election and his status as head of state.

A spokesman for the German Cabinet Steffen Seibert said that the German government continued considering the results of the presidential election in Belarus illegitimate.

"The federal government regrets that European leaders have failed to agree on a sanctions list against the Belarusian authorities," he noted.

As we reported earlier, all heads of the Foreign Ministries of the EU countries recognized the presidential elections in Belarus falsified.

Leaders of Lithuania, Poland, Romania asks EU structures to discuss aid to Belarus
21 September 2020, 17:46


“Such A Farce.” World Community And Belarusian Opposition On Lukashenko’s Inauguration

BelarusFeed 2020-09-23 17:57:40

The international community and the Belarusian opposition reacted to the inauguration of Alexander Lukashenko. The representatives of many countries stressed that despite the formal ceremony, they don’t recognise the beginning of a new five-year presidential term of Lukashenko.

World reacts

Germany still does not recognise Alexander Lukashenko as president of Belarus even after his inauguration on Wednesday, government spokesman Steffen Seibert said.

He added that “the fact that this ceremony was prepared secretly and carried out away from the public eye is very telling,” Deutsche Welle reports. Berlin reportedly wants to agree on EU sanctions against Belarus as quickly as possible.

Foreign ministers of several EU countries also commented on the ceremony, declaring their official position. The Minister of Foreign Affairs of Estonia reacted on the inauguration of Alexander Lukashenko on his Twitter acoount, calling it illegitimate.

Today’s illegitimate inauguration of #Lukashenko goes against all principles of democracy.

Lukashenko has clearly lost his mandate.

We call upon free and fair elections for people of #Belarus to get the president they deserve.
— Urmas Reinsalu (@UrmasReinsalu) September 23, 2020

In a similar vein, Slovak Foreign Minister Ivan Korcok expressed his opinion on Twitter.
Alexander #Lukashenko, inaugurated today, has no legitimacy to lead his country. He is responsible for presidential elections in #Belarus which were neither free nor fair. Slovakia  
stands with citizens of Belarus.
— Ivan Korcok (@IvanKorcok) September 23, 2020

Minister of Foreign Affairs of the Czech Republic Tomáš Petříček also declared the illegitimacy of the formal procedure for the inauguration of the President of Belarus.

 
The elections in #Belarus were neither free nor fair. The result is therefore illegitimate, which is why today’s inauguration of Alexander #Lukashenko is also illegitimate. Belarusian civil society has the full support of the Czech Republic. Belarusians deserve #freedom.
— Tomáš Petříček (@TPetricek) September 23, 2020

The head of the Lithuanian Foreign Ministry Linas Linkevičius used even more categorical language.


Such a farce. Forged elections. Forged inauguration. The former president of #Belarus does not become less former. Quite the contrary. His illegitimacy is a fact with all the consequences that this entails.
— Linas Linkevicius (@LinkeviciusL) September 23, 2020

According to several independent media sources, Germany, Lithuania, Latvia, Slovakia, the Czech Republic, Estonia and Denmark have announced that they no longer consider Lukashenko the President of Belarus.
Belarusian opposition reacts

Pavel Latushko, a member of the Presidium of the Coordination Council of the Belarusian opposition, considers the situation with today’s inauguration unprecedented, in his telegram channel he called it “a special operation for his self-inauguration.”

“Under the protection of riot police, in an atmosphere of secrecy, in a small circle of hastily brought officials. Where are the jubilant citizens? Where is the diplomatic corps? And frankly, it looks more like a thieves’ meeting for the coronation of another thief in law. It is obvious that Alexander Lukashenko is exclusively the president of the OMON [riot police] and a handful of lying officials,” Latushko said.


Former presidential candidate Svetlana Tikhanovskaya called today’s ceremony at the Palace of Independence a farce, stressing that from now on, Lukashenko’s orders to the security forces have no effect, and only she is the legitimate leader elected by Belarusians.

“Today, in secret from the people, Lukashenko tried to hold his own inauguration. We all understand what’s going on. This attempt to recognise himself as legitimate only led to the fact that the previous mandate ended, and the people did not give him a new one. This so-called inauguration is, of course, a farce.

In fact, today Lukashenko has just retired. This means that his orders to power structures are no longer legitimate and cannot be executed. I, Svetlana Tikhanovskaya, am the only leader elected by the Belarusian people. And our task now is to build a new Belarus together,” Tikhanovskaya said.

Valery Tsepkalo, who was a presidential contender, recorded a video message, where he said that the legal procedure for holding the event was violated.

“The person who today said that he is going to comply with the laws of the Republic of Belarus has violated every conceivable law that related to the presidential elections in the country, and which related to the inauguration, according to which it had to be announced in advance, people should know and it had to be broadcast on television and on state radio.

A person who has violated all laws, including the article of the criminal code, which relates to the illegal seizure and retention of state power. The person who announced the commission of a crime in terms of retaining and seizing state power – unconstitutional – is exempt from liability,” said Tsepkalo.

He also appealed to the law enforcement agencies of Belarus, prosecutors, the KGB and the Ministry of Internal Affairs with a request to give this event [an inauguration ceremony] a legal assessment, recalling their oath of service to the Belarusian people.

Source: TUT.BY
Belarusian opposition not to pay back $1.5 billion loan to Russia in case of rise to power
As far as Lukashenko is not considered to be the legitimate president, $1.5 billion loan is a personal gift of Putin to Lukashenko

23 September 2020

Sviatlana Tsikhanouskaya TASS

The opposition of Belarus headed by Sviatlana Tsikhanouskaya, in case of coming to power, is not going to pay back $1.5 billion loan to Russia agreed by Alexander Lukashenko and Vladimir Putin in Sochi as Tsikhanouskaya’s Spokesperson Anna Krasulina reported.

Krasulina was asked to tell about the actions of the opposition, in case of the implementation of the scenario of the integration of Belarus with Russia within the Union State.

“We stated very clearly that Alexander Lukashenko is not a legitimate president of the Republic of Belarus anymore that is why any treaties with him, any agreements or signed documents will be fulfilled by the future government of the Republic of Belarus. We warned about it beforehand all partakers before the meeting of Vladimir Putin and Alexander Lukashenko that is why money that Vladimir Vladimirovich wants to present to Alexander Lukashenko, he gives from himself and personally to Mr. Lukashenko. They will deal with 1.5 billion because the Republic of Belarus will not return money for payment of OMON services, which destroy, suppress, kill and force civilian population,” she said.

Krasulina expressed regret that Putin took such a position in the Belarusian issue.

Earlier, President of the Russian Federation Vladimir Putin approved the allocation of 1.5 billion dollars in loan to Belarus. Putin made this statement during his talks with Belarusian President Alexander Lukashenko in Sochi.

As we reported earlier, Vladimir Putin recognized the presidential elections in Belarus and called them valid.

“We proceed from the assumption that the elections took place. I did it right away. We recognized their legitimacy. I congratulated Alexander Lukashenko on his victory in these elections,” the statement said.

'Violence For the Sake Of Violence': Minsk IT Worker Recounts 'Torture' In Belarusian Jail

September 23, 2020 
By Alena Litvinava
Tony Wesolowsky


Maksim Karalieuski joins a demonstration against the Belarusian government -- in Kyiv.

With his dog and cat by his side, Maksim Karaleuski stood in the square, the red-and-white flag of the first independent Belarusian republic draped over his shoulders, joining calls for Alyaksandr Lukashenka to step down.

Belarus has been rocked by protests since Lukashenka, in power for 26 years, was declared the winner of the August 9 presidential election, which critics charge was blatantly rigged.

Authorities have brutally suppressed many of the demonstrations in Minsk and elsewhere, detaining thousands and beating hundreds -- including Karaleuski, who was arrested as he bicycled home late on August 11, long after protests that day had ended.

But this time, Karaleuski did not fear arrest: He was in Kyiv, not Minsk, demonstrating alongside fellow Belarusians in Ukraine and other supporters of the protests against Lukashenka and his government.

Maksim Karaleuski wouldn't have left Belarus without his dog and cat.

Amid the current political turmoil, many firms in the IT sector, one of the few economic success stories in Belarus, have either moved or are contemplating it, taking their skilled employees with them. Other IT workers have decided on their own to leave, some after being swept up in the police crackdown on protests over the disputed election.

A survey in late August of 34 IT companies in Belarus by the tech news site Dev.by found that 167 of their employees had been detained by security forces over just four days, August 9-12.

Karaleuski arrived in the Ukrainian capital earlier this month after a horrific night in Minsk's notorious Akrestina jail -- where "lawlessness and torture" reigned, he said.

"At the beginning of the night, they ordered us on our knees, and then put us in a different cell -- there were 127 people in there," he told RFE/RL's Belarus Service. "We didn't get any water, no food, it was very cold, but no one cared. We faced constant abuse. If you moved or asked for something, you could get slugged. If you asked for a lawyer, a fair trial, or disputed the police report, they could brutally beat you."

Karaleuski said he suffered beatings all over his body, his testimony echoing much of what others held there say they endured.

"I had bruises all over, on my back, legs, thighs, and face. When they detained me, they shaved a cross on the back of my head. I didn't know why or understand the reason because I have short hair. It was violence for the sake of violence," he explained. "They cut up my shorts and ordered me to unlock my phone. But they ended up doing it themselves, with my finger, because my phone has a fingerprint ID sensor."

SEE ALSO:
'How Can This Be Our Country?': Claims Of Torture Abound As Belarusian Jails Swell


Karaleuski was relatively fortunate: He was freed the next day, on August 12, along with some others. Their release seemed timed to a visit to the jail by Deputy Interior Minister Alyaksandr Barsukou -- who had himself been accused of beating detainees at Akrestina -- that seemed aimed to quiet charges of alleged torture inside.

Freed, Karaleuski and his lawyer documented his injuries and hoped to file a complaint, in what would be a fruitless effort.

"I went to the Investigative Committee about the illegal detention and beatings. My lawyer and I were able to get confirmation of the beatings at the State Service of Medical Forensic Expertise, but [the Investigative Committee] did not respond. There was no movement at all on the matter," he said. "They never called me in to give testimony."

Lucky To Get Out

Shortly after that, Karaleuski, an orphan whose only relative in Minsk is his grandmother, decided it was time to take his pets and leave Belarus as the authorities began rounding up opposition leaders or forcing them to flee the country -- including presidential candidate Svyatlana Tsikhanouskaya, now in Lithuania, who claims she was the real winner of the election.

"When there was news that the Ukrainian government would facilitate the resettlement of Belarusians -- it was on September 3 -- I decided to move. I had an invitation to work, but at the border I wasn't asked about it. I only showed my passport and COVID-19 insurance. They did not ask for anything else," Karaleuski said. "It was good timing, because afterward I heard that at the border they began to ask for certain documents. But I was lucky."

He worried that his dog, Ostsin (Austin), and his cat, Palina (Pauline) wouldn't be so lucky – but they also made it to Ukraine.

"Of course, it wasn't easy, but I wouldn't abandon them at any cost and was ready to do whatever was necessary to make sure we all got across the border successfully. However, there were no problems at the border. I brought them in. They rode in the minibus quietly, resting the whole trip. We were able to cross the border because we had everything – [identity] chips, vaccines, passports, documents," Karaleuski said.



A Big Loss

The exodus of IT workers and businesses has dealt a further blow to the Belarusian economy, already negatively impacted by the COVID-19 pandemic. It has also been crippled by strike actions connected with the anti-Lukashenka protests and a run on the banks, as jittery Belarusians withdraw deposits as the Belarusian ruble tumbles.

An online survey found that at least 12 IT companies were completely relocating, 59 partially relocating, and 112 examining options for moving.


Hit Escape: The IT Companies Leaving Belarus

"The Belarusian IT sector makes up 6.2 percent of the country's GDP, and more than 13 percent of the service sector. More than 90 percent of IT services are used by foreign clients. So they bring in foreign-currency revenue. It's big money," Dzyanis Maroz, an IT consultant, recently told Current Time, a Russian-language channel led by RFE/RL in cooperation with VOA.

The Minsk Hi-Tech Park is home to 750 companies, or was. It was founded by Valer Tsapkala, who sought to challenge Lukashenka but was barred from the ballot for reasons he contends were groundless and politically motivated and fled Belarus a few weeks before the disputed election. He said he'd been threatened by state prosecutors.

"The high-tech sector, it's all about trust, not about expensive hardware or equipment. How can you build anything if trust has been violated?" Tsapkala told RFE/RL in August. "There's no trust in the government, in Lukashenka's words anymore."

That sentiment is echoed by Karaleuski, who said he also didn't want to support a "usurper" -- a word many Belarusians who believe the election was stolen use to refer to Lukashenka.

"I came here so I could express my opinions openly and not pay taxes to the usurper of power," he explained, adding that he hadn't shut the door on his homeland.

"If the regime changes, I will gladly return to Belarus to work in a new country," he said.
Written by Tony Wesolowsky based on reporting by Alena Litvinava of RFE/RL's Belarus Service

Software Engineer Reports Sexual Assault In Police Van, Seeks Justice

TUT.BY journalists talked to a 30-year-old programmer Ales [name has been changed – BelarusFeed note] in the emergency care hospital in Minsk soon after the violent dispersal of post-election protests on 9-12 August. The injured were taken there from police departments and detention facilities on Okrestin Street.

At the time he could not and did not want to talk about what happened to him after the arrest. But after filing a complaint with the Investigative Committee, leaving abroad and publishing his testimony in a Human Rights Watch report, he agreed to talk about his plans to seek justice.

He pushed the stick into my anus

Ales was arrested near Minsk Hero City Stele on the evening of 11 August. Riot police were detaining random bystanders there, and that’s how he ended up in a paddy wagon. Later Ales shared his horrifying story with the activists of Human Rights Watch. Below is an excerpt of it:

[Riot police] demanded that I unlock my phone. I refused. They called a senior officer. He threatened that unless I cooperate, he’d stick his truncheon up my [ass]. He then cut my shorts and my underwear on the back, crosswise, and called out to his officers asking whether anyone had a condom. I was on the floor, face down, but I could see him pull the condom on the truncheon – and then he just pushed the stick into my anus…. Then, he pulled it out and demanded the password again. He kicked and punched me on my ribs, on my face, on my teeth – my two front teeth cracked a bit,” the man recalled the events of that evening.

There were other detainees in the paddy wagon who saw and heard what was happening to Ales. Ales is convinced that it will not be a problem to find witnesses if needed. The paddy wagon brought the detainees to the Zavodskoy District Department of Internal Affairs. There, either lying on the grass or kneeling at the wall with his hands tied behind his back, Ales spent all night and all the next day.

The cut clothes were constantly falling off, and he was allowed to take a jacket that one of the detainees offered him. After that, Ales and the others were sent to a detention facility on Okrestsin Street. There, the guards asked who needed medical help. Soon the man was taken by an ambulance to the emergency hospital.

Evil and cruelty must be punished

At the hospital, Ales was diagnosed with a mild closed craniocerebral injury, brain concussion, left paraorbital hematoma, left chest contusion, subcutaneous hematoma of the perineum, subcutaneous hematoma in the right thigh, intramucosal hemorrhages of the rectum.

The authenticity of the epicrisis was confirmed to TUT.BY by Abdul Al Audi, Ales’s attending physician from the trauma department No. 1 of the emergency hospital. In the hospital, a psychologist also worked with Ales – a standard practice for victims of sexual violence. As soon as Ales was discharged, he went to see a lawyer and submited a complaint with the Investigative Committee of the Central District of Minsk.

“I submitted the application on 20 August. Then I was sent for a forensic examination. About a week later, the investigator called me in for an additional questioning, to clarify the details. After that, no one contacted me, but yesterday, on 17 September, the representatives of the Central Office of the Investigative Committee called my lawyer,” said Ales.

He stressed that in his statement , he described the circumstances of his injuries in as much detail as possible. Ales is determined to bring the case to trial. The point is not even that he was subjected to such humiliation: “It’s just that evil and cruelty must be punished.”

“Everything that happened looks like a planned act of intimidation, given the number of victims and the nature of the injuries. The Ministry of Internal Affairs actually covering for its employees who have committed a lot of crimes,” he says.

Ales left the country – in Belarus, a victim can easily become a suspect. He will continue to work with the Investigative Committee through his lawyer. The Investigative Committee confirmed that his statement was received, and is currently being investigated.

Official version

27 August

The Investigative Committee received no complaints of sexual assault neither from men nor from women. The investigators also received no data on rectal injuries among men or injuries to female genital organs, the official representative of the Investigative Committee Sergey Kabakovich told TUT.BY.

16 September

The Investigative Committee of Belarus had received no complaints of rape by police officers during protest actions, First Deputy Internal Affairs Minister, Head of Criminal Police Gennady Kazakevich said at a press conference. He described the information on the rapes as fake. “One can not rape in a paddy wagon,” he said.

18 September

There are no registered official allegations of sexual violence against the detainees, Belarus Permanent Representative Yury Ambrazevich said during a debate in the UN Human Rights Council.

Unofficial version 

The BY_Help initiative, which helps detained, fined, wounded and beaten Belarusians, including Ales, has other information.

“We have data on at least five cases of sexual violence in very similar circumstances. At the moment, the information received is being checked, but we are already helping these people,” said Andrey Strizhak.


Putin should not be seen as all-knowing 'evil genius'; he is classic KGB opportunist

10.09.2020 11:45

 Luke Harding is a foreign correspondent for The Guardian, who was expelled from Russia in 2011 for a scandalous interview with disgraced oligarch Boris Berezovsky.

He is the author of the book "Mafia State" in which he argued that in Russia it is impossible to separate the government from the criminal world as organized crime and law enforcement agencies have become one entity. Harding was one of the journalists to whom Edward Snowden passed classified information from the U.S. National Security Agency. In 2011, Harding and David Leigh published a book entitled "WikiLeaks: Inside Julian Assange's War on Secrecy" about Julian Assange. The film "The Fifth Estate" was partly based on the materials of the book. Harding's book "The Snowden Files: The Inside Story of the World's Most Wanted Man" was published in 2014. It also served as the basis for the blockbuster film "Snowden." In his new book, "Shadow State," he writes that back in 2017-2018, representatives of Yevgeny Prigozhin's Internet Research Agency discussed the possibility of stoking racial tensions among African Americans. Tetiana Popova, a TV presenter of the Dom television channel, was talking to Harding.

Question: How is it to be a personal enemy of Putin? What were the methods for assessing Putin's wealth which you describe in your book "Mafia State"?

Answer: I guess it's a mixture of sort of personal experience and also having sources inside Russia plus people, who were part of the regime, who, when I was in Moscow, wouldn't talk to me. And then, of course, they all run away to London and then they will talk openly about what's going on.

I mean just to say briefly I was or I am a career foreign correspondent with The Guardian newspaper.

I arrived in Moscow, having previously worked in Berlin and in Delhi. And I thought that Russia was a sort of semi-democracy.

And it became pretty clear that it's not. That it's a corrupt and aggressive revisionist power run by ruthless people.

I found this out because there were a series of break-ins at our Moscow apartment which, we were told by the British embassy, were carried out by the FSB – Putin's spy agency.

Question: As far as I understand, you communicated personally with Assange and Snowden. Who are these people in communication, in life?

Answer: I never met Mr. Snowden because by the time Snowden went to Moscow I was already expelled from Russia. As far as I'm aware, you know I'm blacklisted and I can't actually travel to Moscow anymore.

I met Julian Assange in 2010 when he was working with a number of journalists, including from my newspaper, on the release of classified U.S diplomatic cables, which painted a pretty unflattering portrait of Russia and described Vladimir Putin as head of a mafia state. I worked with Julian on that and wrote a book about it. Subsequently, he fell out with The Guardian, but I have to say I do support his struggle to avoid being extradited to the United States which is going on at the moment. For what he did in 2010 which I think really was journalism rather than anything else.

Right that was a huge victory for Edward Snowden because if you remember back in 2013 the reason he decided to leak all of these secrets from the National Security Agency in America. And fly to Hong Kong where he met with my colleagues from The Guardian.

Question: A court in the United States declared illegal the surveillance of the special services uncovered by Snowden. Because collecting records of telephone conversations of U.S. citizens without the permission of the courts violates the Foreign Intelligence Surveillance Act. What do you think about the fate of Edward Snowden?

Answer: Snowden thought the U.S government was doing basically spying not only on American citizens, but on everybody including citizens of my country, of Ukraine and elsewhere. He thought this should not be done without a kind of proper conversation and what he has started at least is a discussion about the boundary between privacy in the 21st century and modern technology and the capacity for nation states to seize all of our communications, our emails, our phone data and so on.

I really think he is a great figure. He's paid a big price. I think he's stuck in Russia forever. People accuse him of being a Russian spy but I really don't think he is a Russian spy. I think he is a genuine whistleblower and we should all be grateful to it.

Question: Your professional activities and high-profile publications do not cause optimism among the leaders of a number of countries. In addition to the ban on entry to Russia, did you feel other elements of the attention of the special services, and how was this experience?

Answer: It's pretty clear that Kremlin doesn't like me very much and obviously I was case out of the country and I get pretty frequently attacked on social media by Russia's famous kind of troll army based in Petersburg. Also I have to say I'm not very popular in America, at least with the kind of Trump administration.

One of my sources from my books is Christopher Steele, a former MI6 British spy, who wrote the famous dossier, which said that the Russians had compromise on Donald Trump.

Therefore, I get regular abuse from Trump supporters who say that I'm fake, it's a hoax and so on.

It does not really bother me because I think actually that my kind of portrayal of Russia is a kind of dark state that wants to reshape the world it is right. And you know, of course, you get a little bit of abuse but I think it we carry on and it's important more than ever in a time when we have politicians all over the place who lie routinely.

Question: During our first conversation, you said that in the Western countries Russia used the methods of hybrid warfare, which were tested in Ukraine. Which instruments did you mean?

Answer: What I meant, Tetiana, was this mixture of force for military solutions with quite sort of sophisticated social media targeting. It's almost as if you know with one hand you are using tanks, heavy artillery, men who are sort of formally not associated with the Russian army but are clearly linked to Russian military structures. On the other hand, you have young cynical people sitting in a troll factory, pumping out anti-Ukraine messages, and it's a form of sabotage because it's a sort of war for physical territory.

We've seen Ukraine's borders changed by force in 2014 in the annexation of Crimea, but it's also a war for the mind, it's an attempt to create a kind of different reality in people's heads and to push narratives which have got nothing to do with truth.

This has really been perfected by the Kremlin in the near broad in Ukraine in particular and then it's been rolled out into western countries. I think most people only woke up to this after 2016 when Kremlin trolls massively played with the minds of American voters to try and discredit Hillary Clinton and to help Donald Trump.

Question: How can the Western world find a balance between the need to adequately respond to the aggressive actions of the Russian Federation and at the same time comply with the requirements for the observance of basic human rights?

Answer: It's a very good question and I think one thing that we have learned from people like Christopher Steele who wrote the Trump dossier and from others is that Russian spies are not like something from an old movie where they appear as these stiff figures wearing a military uniform with epaulets. They are oligarchs or regular people or businessmen or students or whatever. Who are clever, they read books, they love their children. But actually what they're doing is a form of espionage and they are kind of informal or formal Kremlin assets.

I think western society, including in my country, hasn't really understood this sufficiently. We had a big report recently published by the British parliament's intelligence and security committee it was called the "Russia report."

It essentially said that that London was Londongrad, had become a haven for money laundering for people from Moscow, not all of them bad but many of them linked to the Kremlin. That there was a whole network of British people lawyers, real estate people, PR people who had been hired by the Kremlin.

Essentially by Kremlin figures to advance Russia's geopolitical agenda and I think it's a sort of dangerous situation. Everybody is broken. Western countries need money and investment we have the coronavirus. At the same time, so much of this money that comes from Moscow is black money which comes with a political agenda.

Question: Active preparations are underway for the November G20 summit. The Russian Federation did everything (the poisoning of Navalny, the ongoing annexation of the Republic of Belarus, the ongoing occupation of Crimea and Donbas, Russia's interference in the internal affairs of Syria, Lebanon, Libya and dozens of other countries) so that international security issues would definitely be the focus of this meeting. What is your prediction: will the international community be able to find methods to stop Russia? What could they be?

Answer: I think two things, first of all, is to understand what's going on and how Putin and the people around him think. And essentially, you know, Vladimir Putin is not interested in win-win mutual solutions. He is a classic zero-sum thinker. He thinks that what is bad for Ukraine and the west is good for Russia and vice versa.

He has a kind of paranoid mentality - KGB mentality. Going back to the Cold War where he really sees Russia surrounded by enemies and in the state of permanent of unofficial war with western countries.

So, first of all, politicians need to understand that and, secondly, of course, no one wants conflict with Russia especially after what happened in Ukraine.

So the answer is sanctions! We have some sanctions already against Kremlin figures but they need to be bigger and broader and include family members, travel bans, freezes on bank accounts.

Because what do you have to understand about the Russian regime it is at home hyper patriotic, very nationalistic. You know "Crimea is ours" and so on. But in reality, the people at the top what they really care about is their money. They're billionaires and to lose their money, to lose access to western markets is very very painful.

Question: In your book "Shadow State" you write that back in 2017-2018, representatives of Prigozhin's Internet Research Agency discussed the possibility of provoking African Americans into interracial conflicts. Do you think it was expressed later in the Black Lives Matter Movement?

Answer: We have to be clear that Putin is not an all-knowing evil genius who sort of sits behind the desk, with a console of red flashing lights pushes a button, so that something will happen in Kyiv or in London, or in Washington and so on.

That's not right. He is a classic KGB opportunist whose attitude is "let's try it and see if it works." And what he does in the way the KGB used to do is to identify sniff out weaknesses in other societies, other people's countries and to try and exploit them.

So Putin doesn't start the fire but he's the person who kind of creeps out from the side and puts paraffin on the fire.

That's what we've seen in America with Black Lives Matter. These racial tensions exist regardless of Putin or not. But what he's been trying to do is to sort of create a state of almost cold civil war in America. Ethnic war, political war and so on. And to exacerbate those problems which are there already.

I have to say that Donald Trump has been an accomplice in this. Putin has been so successful that actually he can almost step out.

Question: In your latest book, you also point to the rather active influence of Russians in the Brexit campaign. Could you tell the audience what exactly was going on?

Answer: What you have to understand is that the same push that happened in America by Kremlin spies and social media trolls also happened in the United Kingdom, in my country, because Putin hates the European Union and supports Brexit.

Because he thinks it will damage Brussels, damage the EU and weaken Britain economically and politically. What we saw in 2016 was, first of all, a big huge social media campaign to push hot button issues like immigration from the EU, from Syria and so on. And to push pro-leave, pro-Brexit messages.

So there was social media but there was also classic espionage involving the Russian embassy in London. Even the Russian ambassador at the time, Alexander Yakovenko, who met with key figures from the Brexit campaign one of whom gave an enormous political donation of about almost nine million pounds. Yakovenko was offering this individual called Aaron Banks a gold deal opportunity. To invest in Siberia gold mines. Then a diamond deal and then another gold deal.

There was even a Russian spy at the leave victory party in the summer of 2016. What I find very depressing is the British government of Boris Johnson does not want to investigate what happened because they support Brexit. So for political reasons they are looking the other way if you like.

Question: Luke, you have been studying the methods of Russian influence for a long time. And perhaps you have recommendations on how to resist it. As you know, the ceasefire lasted for about 1.5 months in Ukraine. Several days ago, the head of the so-called "DPR" announced the planned shelling of Ukrainian positions. And the positions were shelled in several places. One soldier was killed and one was wounded. All this is happening against the background of local elections, where it is beneficial for the Russians to promote the pro-Russian party of Viktor Medvedchuk. How do you think the situation may develop further and how should Ukraine react to such Russian operations?

Answer: Ukraine has been on the front line and is on the front line. You know I've been to Donetsk and Luhansk. I was reporting for The Guardian from Ukraine in 2014 and saw everything happen there but also figuratively I mean Ukrainian struggle more than any other country from Russian interference. What Vladimir Putin is very good at is tearing the dial up and then turning it down depending on his strategic need. With elections coming up, of course, he wants to kind of interfere and undermine some candidates and to push other candidates that he prefers.

I think there are no easy solutions. The answer for Ukraine, which your viewers will perfectly understand, is reform that actually Ukraine needs to kind of reform itself it needs to have.

I mean it's not for me to kind of give advice but maybe to try and clean up corruption. To adopt kind of European standards of transparency. To ensure that the courts are fair, that you can't buy justice.

I think the more that actually Ukraine can move away from the kind of Russian model towards European model, the better it will be in the long term and the easier it will be for Ukraine to stand up to Russian abuse.

The other thing I would say is media. It's important that there's this good free fair impartial media in Ukraine which too often in the past has been run by and owned by oligarchs. So good media and good governance is the answer in my view.

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Photo credit: White Noise, Hameen Sanomat

 

Zelensky, Trudeau discuss possible Canada's visa liberalization for Ukrainians

President of Ukraine Volodymyr Zelensky hopes for progress in Canada's gradual visa liberalization for Ukrainian citizens.

"Canada's visa liberalization for Ukrainians remains a topical issue for me. I hope we will be able to move this process forward and achieve simplification for Ukrainians traveling to Canada," Zelensky said in a phone conversation with Prime Minister of Canada Justin Trudeau, the President’s press service informs.

The parties also discussed the possibility of coordinating measures taken by both countries to overcome coronavirus consequences. The President of Ukraine and the Prime Minister of Canada called for the removal of artificial barriers to the development of international trade to support national economies weakened by the pandemic, as well as to ensure access of all countries to the necessary medical products.

"I express my sincere support to your government and to all Canadians in the fight against coronavirus. I would like to express deep condolences to the relatives and friends of the deceased and wish the sick a speedy recovery," Volodymyr Zelensky said.

In addition, the President of Ukraine informed PM Trudeau of the situation in Donbas and Ukraine's consistent steps towards a peaceful settlement.

"Achieving peace in Donbas remains a key priority for me. I am grateful for Canada's strong support for the sovereignty and territorial integrity of our state," Zelensky said.

The parties also exchanged views on the current situation in Belarus.

Volodymyr Zelensky and Justin Trudeau also discussed the progress of reforms in Ukraine. The Prime Minister of Canada called the steps taken by the President of Ukraine to reform the state courageous and expressed support.