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July 20 – July 26, 2020
Election campaign 2020 (Archive)

Tsikhanouskaya triumphantly campaigns in Belarusian cities; Lukashenka campaigns at military units and the CEC banns observation

The situation has not changed
Tsikhanouskaya triumphantly campaigns in Belarusian cities; Lukashenka campaigns at military units and the CEC banns observation

By Valeria Kostyugova

Tsikhanouskaya’s joint campaign is gathering crowds in Belarusian cities. Viktar Babaryka faced tougher charges. The CEC has restricted domestic election observation. Lukashenka is campaigning in military units and among executives.

The CEC alienates from voters

Amid numerous requests from citizens to register as domestic observers, the Central Election Commission has limited domestic observation at polling stations to five observers on election day and three during early voting. Before this decision, local election commissions did not accept accreditation applications from independent observers, however, after the decision was announced, it turned out that pro-government organizations had already received accreditation. The CEC also refused to ensure transparent counting of votes. Previously, the CEC failed to send a timely invitation to international observers, did not allow opposition in electoral commissions. The CEC head had justified the decision to limit domestic observation by referring to election commission members’ fears. The CEC also decided to enable only state media in the press center on election day.

Overall, human rights activists have concluded that the presidential elections in Belarus have lost the remaining attributes of an election campaign.

Repression

Since the beginning of the election campaign, more than 1200 people were detained. Some of those detained in the last two weeks have been released. On July 22nd, the wife and mother of Paval Sevyarynets were informed about his release later that day, however, relatives, associates, and the media waited in vain. Presumably, Sevyarynets is unlikely to be released before the end of the campaign, making the total count of days in detention to 63. Members of Tsikhanouskaya’s initiative group and Statkevich would have spent more than 70 days behind bars by then.

Last week, the Prosecutor General notified that new charges were brought against Viktar Babaryka: part 2 of article 431 (giving a bribe) was re-qualified to part 3 of article 430 (taking a bribe).

The scale of repressions during the campaign has raised concerns in the European Union.

Presidential hopeful Tsepkala has left Belarus with his family.

Campaigning

On July 21st, candidates Tsikhanouskaya, Kanapatskaya, Cherechen, and Dzmitryeu made TV appeals to their voters, which were broadcast uncut.

Tsikhanouskaya’s united team successfully campaigned in every city they visited, gathering crowds of voters. They held three rallies in different cities a day. Nationalistic rhetoric and symbolism are appearing in Tsikhanouskaya’s rallies more frequently.

Nobel laureate Aleksiyevich urged to vote for Tsikhanouskaya.

Amidst unprecedented mass rallies for Tsikhanouskaya, Cherechen and Kanapatskaya abandoned plans to hold pickets, Dzmitryeu continued to meet with voters while touring the country.

Campaigning is further hardly visible in the streets. By law, authorities are obliged to put up campaigning materials two weeks before the elections. At the end of the week, the CEC sent out leaflets with information about five candidates.

Last week, Lukashenka harshly criticized his HQs for information policy failures and demanded that Foreign Ministry revoked accreditations of foreign media outlets: Radio Svaboda, BBC, and KP in Belarus. After that, his headquarters released several videos of president’s meetings with ordinary voters in a free manner. However, most Lukashenka’s campaigning meetings take place in isolation from ordinary citizens – with his executives and in military units.

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Once a week, in coordination with a group of prominent Belarusian analysts, we provide analytical commentaries on the most topical and relevant issues, including the behind-the-scenes processes occurring in Belarus. These commentaries are available in Belarusian, Russian, and English.
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