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US and allies impose new sanctions on Belarus over migrant crisis and ongoing human rights abuses

<i>Nikolay Petrov/Pool/Belta/AP</i><br/>The US imposed sanctions on Belarus in response to the migrant crisis on the border with Poland and ongoing human rights violations by the Lukashenko regime
AP
Nikolay Petrov/Pool/Belta/AP
The US imposed sanctions on Belarus in response to the migrant crisis on the border with Poland and ongoing human rights violations by the Lukashenko regime

By Jennifer Hansler, CNN

The United States joined with international allies to impose new sanctions on Belarus Thursday in response to the migrant crisis on the border with Poland and the political repression and ongoing human rights violations committed by the Lukashenko regime.

The US, United Kingdom, European Union, and Canada took coordinated action against a number of Belarusian entities and individuals in their latest effort to put pressure on Belarus’s longtime strongman leader Alexander Lukashenko, who has been accused of using “innocent migrants as a political weapon, as an effort at destabilization,” in the words of US Secretary of State Antony Blinken, and whose government has carried out a campaign of repression against activists, dissidents and journalists.

“We remain committed to supporting the democratic aspirations of the people of Belarus and stand together to impose costs on the regime — and those who support it — for its efforts to silence the voices of independent civil society, media, and all Belarusians seeking to speak the truth about what is happening in their country,” the four nations said in a joint statement.

The sanctions also come at a time of heightened tension between Moscow — the Lukashenko regime’s strongest backer — and much of the West as Russian President Vladimir Putin amasses troops on the border with Ukraine.

In the joint statement, the US, Canada, UK, and EU demanded that the Lukashenko “immediately and completely halt its orchestrating of irregular migration across its borders with the EU.”

“Those, in Belarus or in third countries, who facilitate illegal crossing of the EU’s external borders should know this comes at a substantial cost,” the nations said.

Belarusian Foreign Minister Vladimir Makei, speaking at the Organization for Security and Co-operation in Europe (OSCE) ministerial in Stockholm Thursday, said that Belarus has been “punished” by sanctions “only because we have revealed the ‘dark side’ of European democracy.”

“Please remember a simple truth: those who in effect demand the strangling of their people through destructive sanctions will never be accepted by this people and will not be in demand in this country,” Makei said, according to a tweet from the Ministry of Foreign Affairs.

‘Significant’ sanctions

The US Treasury Department on Thursday announced it is “designating 20 individuals and 12 entities and identifying three aircraft as blocked property,” further sanctioning Belarus’s potash industry, and imposing restrictions on dealings with Belarus’s sovereign debt.

“Since June 2021, partners and allies, including the EU, UK, Canada, and Switzerland, have targeted new issuances of Belarusian sovereign debt in the primary and secondary markets in an effort to hold the Lukashenka regime responsible for its ongoing malign behavior,” the Treasury Department said in a press release, using an alternate spelling of the Belarusian leader’s name.

“The addition of U.S. restrictions on dealings in new issuances of Belarusian sovereign debt in the primary and secondary markets demonstrates close coordination with partners and allies to restrict the Lukashenka regime’s access to international capital markets,” it said.

Among those sanctioned are Belarus’s state-owned tourism company, its state-owned cargo carrier, five entities linked to its defense sector, and a number of individuals with close ties to Lukashenko, including his middle son.

“I think it actually is quite significant,” said Julia Friedlander, a senior fellow at the Atlantic Council and former senior policy adviser on Europe at the Treasury Department.

Friedlander told CNN that the restrictions on debt issuance are a particularly big deal, noting that “it shows that the administration is saying now is the moment to use all of our leverage.”

“I am very skeptical that sanctions pressure will cause (Lukashenko) to change course,” Friedlander said. “This is about limiting he and his inner circle’s ability to act financially.”

“It could undermine his ability to keep the economy stable, which could lead to further domestic unrest,” she added.

Kenneth Yalowitz, a former US Ambassador to Belarus and fellow at the Wilson Center, also expressed doubt that the new sanctions would prompt a behavior change by Lukashenko, but said they are financially significant.

“They’re probably going to have a hard time borrowing money now and issuing bonds,” he told CNN. “It’s also significant to me, perhaps as a signal to the Russian side, you know, the kinds of financial sanctions that we could bring to bear if they go into Ukraine.”

Blinken repeatedly warned over the past several days that Moscow would “high-impact economic measures that we’ve refrained from taking in the past” if it invades Ukraine.

Yalowitz told CNN that “Belarus is going to be more expensive for the Russians to maintain,” but both he and Friedlander said it was unlikely Putin would cease his support Lukashenko over the new tranches sanctions.

“Belarus, for Putin, is just another part of the military equation that he’s bringing to bear against Ukraine. So he’s not going to jettison Lukashenka now,” he said.

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