Minsk rapped over poll visas
September 20, 2012Berlin's Foreign Ministry summoned the Belarusian ambassador on Thursday after the two observers, one of them German, were denied visas.
Germany's special representative for Eastern Europe, Antje Leendertse, had made clear to Belarusian ambassador Andrei Giro "that the federal government has no understanding at all of electoral observers... and journalists being refused visas," a German foreign ministry statement said.
"Constraints on press freedom, entry denials and hindrances to civil society are already a potential negative sign in the run-up to the election and a further setback to social development," a spokeswoman for the ministry said.
Critics claim the vote on Sunday will be little more than a rubber-stamping exercise for a parliament supportive of authoritarian President Alexander Lukashenko.
On Wednesday, the Organization for Security and Cooperation in Europe named the two banned observers as Marieluise Beck from Germany and Emanuelis Zingeris from Lithuania.
Following a crackdown on dissent after a controversial 2010 presidential election, which gave Lukashenko an unprecedented fourth term, the European Union responded with economic sanctions.
Travel bans were also issued against almost 250 people in the Belarusian government and judicial system. Human rights groups and the US government have called the country “Europe's last dictatorship.”
rc / ipj (AFP, AP)