EU-diplomaten werken aan nieuwe sancties Wit-Rusland (en)

Met dank overgenomen van EUobserver (EUOBSERVER) i, gepubliceerd op maandag 16 mei 2011, 9:21.

EUOBSERVER / BRUSSELS - Diplomats in Brussels are carrying out due diligence on economic sanctions on Belarus as President Aleksander Lukashenko hands out long prison sentences.

EU heads of mission have sent to the EU capital a preliminary list of individuals and commercial entities to be covered by the new measures.

Diplomatic sources say petroleum products companies Belneftekhim and Triple, arms firm Beltechexport and fertiliser maker Belaruskalii are in the frame.

"The list is not yet at the implementable stage. So far it's based on 'he said, she said'-type evidence. We have to make sure the companies really are owned by the people we think they are," an EU diplomat said. "The sanctions are being rolled out bit by bit so that we can keep up the pressure in reaction to developments."

The latest round of sanctions - the third since the post-election crackdown on 19 December - are designed to hurt President Lukashenko's state budget without precipitating a crisis in the country's weak economy.

But they are unlikely to damage the president's private fortune, said to be salted away in Russian and Ukrainian banks, fish and real estate companies as well as offshore accounts in Russia and in at least one EU country.

"To track down these funds would take a serious intelligence operation and there is no EU member state right now willing to commit resources to such a task," the EU diplomat added.

The new list may not be ready in time for EU foreign ministers to rubber stamp it at their meeting in Brussels on Friday (23 May). But the jailing on Saturday for five years of leading opposition figure Andrei Sannikov is likely to galvanise political will.

EU foreign relations chief Catherine Ashton i in a statement at the weekend noted the "readiness of the EU to consider further targeted restrictive measures in all areas of co-operation."

German foreign minister Guido Westerwelle called the trial "an expression of the political will of President Lukashenko." David Lidington, UK minister for Europe, added: "The conduct of his trial has marked a new low for the rule of law in Belarus."

For his part, EU parliament President Jerzy Buzek i said: "This is the regime's revenge for courage and openness. Andrei Sannikov was convicted because he stood up for the truth and democratic future of his country." Buzek earlier called on the International Ice Hockey Federation to strip Belarus of the 2014 ice hockey world cup.

More than 20 opposition personalities have received years-long sentences since the crackdown began.

The 57-year-old Sannikov, who was beaten by police on the night of 19 December, said that during the past five months in prison he was made to sleep on the floor of his cell, subjected to degrading full body searches and threatened by the KGB, Lukashenko's secret police, with reprisals against his family.

As he was being led away he urged the outside world to "take care of my relatives."

His wife and award-winning government critical journalist, Irina Khalip is to go on trial this week. Authorities had in the past threatened to take the couple's almost-four-years-old son, Daniil, into state custody. But Khalip's mother is to take care of him instead.


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