Belarus orders closure of border with Ukraine
Belarus’ leader Alexander Lukashenko has ordered the closure of the border with Ukraine, seeking to block what he called an inflow of weapons to coup-plotters detected by his security services.
The move appears to deepen a standoff between Belarus and outside powers angered by his government’s forcing down of a Ryanair flight in May and arrest of a government critic who was on the aircraft.
Western countries imposed sanctions on Belarus to punish it for the action, the European Union and Ukraine have also banned Belarus-registered flights from entering their airspace.
Lukashenko, who has repeatedly accused Western ill-wishers of trying to oust him from power, said he had ordered a purge across the country, as rebel groups that were planning to carry out a coup had been uncovered in Belarus.
“They have crossed the line. We cannot forgive them,” he said.
Speaking at a gathering marking the country’s Independence Day, the veteran leader said Germany, Lithuania, Poland, Ukraine and the United States were behind the alleged rebel activity.
“A huge amount of weapons is coming from Ukraine to Belarus. That’s why I ordered border-security forces to fully close the border with Ukraine,” Lukashenko said.
However, Ukraine’s foreign ministry spokesperson, Oleh Nikolaenko, said Ukraine had neither interfered in Belarus’ domestic affairs nor was it planning to do so in the future.
“The Ukrainian side has not received an official notification from Belarus on the border closure. It would be primarily the Belarus people to suffer from such a step,” Nikolaenko said.
Belarus shares a border with Ukraine in the south. It borders Poland and Lithuania in the west, Latvia in the north, and Russia in the east.
The move to shut borders with Ukraine comes days after Belarus recalled its permanent representative to the European Union for consultations after Brussels imposed economic sanctions.
Reuters/ Bilkisu Pai