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Post Info TOPIC: For once the U.S and the E.U agree on something


Guru

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RE: For once the U.S and the E.U agree on something
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Julie wrote:



EU condemns Belarus vote, readies sanctions


"NO SKIING FOR LUKASHENKO"




Wow!

No march break in St. Moritz?

These people are ANIMALS!




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Comandante

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US rejects Belarus election results


CLEVELAND (Reuters) - The United States rejects the results of the Belarus election and believes the campaign that re-elected President Alexander Lukashenko was conducted in a "climate of fear," the White House said on Monday.


"We support the call for a new election," said White House spokesman Scott McClellan.


The United States had complained bitterly about events in Belarus ahead of the election.


McClellan warned authorities in Belarus against "threatening or detaining those exercising their political rights in the coming days and beyond," a reference to protests that have been reported there.


"The United States does not accept the results of the election. The election campaign was conducted in a climate of fear. It included arrests and beatings and fraud," McClellan said.


Washington was ready to cooperate with the European Union to take action against those responsible for election fraud and human rights abuses in Belarus, he told reporters.


Both the United States and the EU have accused Lukashenko of abandoning democratic principles and engaging in human rights abuses. They threatened sanctions if the election was found to be fraudulent.


State Department spokesman Sean McCormack noted that the U.S. support for opposition calls for a new election was rhetorical. Washington had not decided on any concrete ways that it might help the opposition force a new vote, he said.


Washington was also ready to impose further limited sanctions against Belarus, such as expanding a list of senior officials banned from visiting the United States, McCormack said.


A U.S. official, who requested anonymity, acknowledged the United States had little sway over Lukashenko.


"The truth is we have little leverage over him, because we have limited economic or diplomatic ties -- and for that matter nor does Europe," the official said. "So, it's really up to the Russians, who have close integration with Belarus. But they are not exactly looking like they are ready to smack Lukashenko upside the head."


 


EU condemns Belarus vote, readies sanctions


BRUSSELS (Reuters) - The European Union is set to sharpen sanctions against Belarus after condemning the ex-Soviet state's presidential election as neither free nor fair.


EU foreign ministers on Monday backed sanctions such as visa bans that could be formalized in April after they have studied in detail the international observers' verdict on the polls.


But divisions emerged over the scope of sanctions, diplomats said, some countries demanding economic restrictions while others backed a more cautious approach.


"We are convinced that for democracy and democrats in Belarus the climate of winter will not prevail," said Austrian Foreign Minister Ursula Plassnik, whose country hold the EU's rotating presidency.


"We have started a discussion on possible restrictive measures," she said, adding the EU fully sided with findings of the Organization for Security and Cooperation in Europe (OSCE).


OSCE observers concluded Sunday's poll in Belarus, in which incumbent Alexander Lukashenko was declared the runaway winner, fell far short of accepted standards.


The executive European Commission said the sanctions could involve a visa ban on Belarus officials deemed responsible for any election rigging. Diplomats said it remained unclear if Lukashenko would be included.


"The actions need to be targeted against those responsible for that. We don't want to turn our backs on the people of Belarus, we don't want to abandon them," EU External Affairs Commissioner Benita Ferrero-Waldner told a news conference.


Speaking to German radio, EU Industry and Enterprise Commissioner Guenter Verheugen called Belarus "a dictatorship", a view long expressed by the United States.


The EU has already banned six Belarussian officials from entering the bloc and the question now is how many officials it will target with new bans.


Belarus's Central Election Commission said Lukashenko won re-election with 82.6 percent of the vote to opposition hopeful Alexander Milinkevich's 6 percent in Sunday's election.  


"NO SKIING FOR LUKASHENKO"


Diplomats said the ministers were split over the timing and scope of sanctions, with Poland and some other countries bordering Belarus demanding targeted economic sanctions and other EU members being more cautious.


"We might have smart sanctions which would be directed at people and companies linked to the Belarus regime," said Poland's deputy foreign minister, Stanislaw Komorowski, adding he backed a visa ban for Lukashenko.


"I see no possibility of Lukashenko coming for skiing in Zakopane (Polish ski resort)," he said.


France said it was too early to speak about details.


"It's a situation from another age (in Belarus), which requires from us an extremely firm reaction," French Foreign Minister Philippe Douste-Blazy told a news briefing.


The Czech Republic prefers to avoid tough sanctions. "I do prefer just to promote dialogue, and to support universities, NGOs, opposition, all democratic forces," said Czech Foreign Minister Cyril Svoboda.


Members of the European Parliament said Belarus should hold a new vote.


"The 82 percent result for Lukashenko can in fact only be called a 'farce' and we will support the opposition in its request for new honest and fair elections," said Hans-Gert Poettering, chairman of the right-wing European Peoples' Party in the parliament.


German Foreign Minister Frank-Walter Steinmeier called on Belarussian authorities to exercise restraint in dealing with any demonstrations by their opponents in the days ahead.



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