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    Demonstrators in Belarus defy ban, clash with police


    AP, MINSK
    Thursday, Mar 27, 2008, Page 1

    Thousands of opposition protesters defied a government ban to stage a demonstration honoring a banned Belarusian holiday, and clashed with riot police as dozens were detained.

    Belarusian President Alexander Lukashenko's authoritarian government had vowed to prevent any demonstrations, but thousands turned out in central Minsk on Tuesday to converge on a central square that was blocked off by heavily armed police.

    Protesters, many of whom appeared to be students, chanted "Long Live Belarus!" and waved opposition and EU flags as police warned them through loudspeakers that the meeting was illegal and they should disperse.

    After about an hour, police began wading into the crowds, beating demonstrators with truncheons and violently hauling them away en masse to waiting police trucks.

    One protester, a middle-aged woman, was tripped and tackled by riot police as she tried to run away. The police then dragged her screaming by her hair to a waiting police bus.

    An Associated Press reporter saw dozens taken away by police; the Interior Ministry reported more than 80 people detained.

    Alis Belasky, who heads the rights group Vesna, said well more than 100 people had been delivered to different police precincts around Minsk, and that Ukrainians and Poles were among them. A Belarusian newspaper photographer was also severely beaten in the scuffles, he said.

    "The authorities have resorted to extreme measures," opposition leader Anatoly Lebedko said.

    "By doing this, they are showing to the world that Belarus is a dictatorship with no freedom of speech nor freedom to gather," he said.

    Hundreds later broke off from the main protest and -- chanting "Down With Luka!" and "Freedom!" -- tried to march down a central street to the presidential administration building. The road was blocked by police trucks and officers in riot gear, who also violently hauled protesters away into waiting police trucks.

    March 25 has long been a traditional day of demonstration for the opposition, marking what they call Freedom Day -- the anniversary of the 1918 declaration of the first, short-lived independent Belarusian state.

    Lukashenko's government has banned such rallies in the past, and opposition groups reported security agents arresting activists around the country before Tuesday's demonstrations and shutting down bus and subway stops near the Minsk square.
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