Belarus – This Color Revolution Is Already Dead. The Union State Has Killed It.

Belarus – This Color Revolution Is Already Dead. The Union State Has Killed It.

Nexta is led by anti-Lukashenko pro-Western ‘activists’ in Poland. The editor in chief is one Roman Protasevich. He was perviously a journalist for the Polish-Lithuanian-funded Euroradio, as well as for the CIA’s Radio Liberty. Nexta was founded by Stepan Putila who earlier worked for the Polish-Belarusian channel Belsat which is based in Warsaw and is funded by the Polish Foreign Ministry. Both currently live in Warsaw.

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Lukashenko wins the election, but his biggest fight may be yet to come

Lukashenko wins the election, but his biggest fight may be yet to come

Lukashenko has said that the perpetrators of the internet block are foreign saboteurs, keen to escalate social tensions. Indeed it cannot be denied, that given Washington’s current strategic goals and hostility towards Russia, any attempt to undermine the Belarussian President and sow discord between Russia and Belarus would be in its interest.

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Lukashenko Points To Foreign Attempts To Shut Down Internet In Belarus

“Some people are itching, they keep calling for taking to the streets. They even shut the Internet down from abroad, to make our people displeased. Our experts are now making effort to establish where the blocking attempts come from. So, if the Internet operates badly, this is not our initiative, it is coming from abroad,” Lukashenko said, as quoted by state news agency Belta.

The Belarusian Opposition Outlined Their “Plan B” If Lukashenko Is Re-Elected as President

The largest media group of the Belarusian opposition “Nexta”, moderated from Poland, published a detailed plan for what to do the day after the …

The Belarusian Opposition Outlined Their “Plan B” If Lukashenko Is Re-Elected as President

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EU must take into account Ukraine’s mistakes: Foreign Policy voiced two scenarios to overthrow Lukashenka

Belarus’ Lukashenko threatens to expel foreign media over critical election coverage

Lukashenko has said that “tendentious” reporting by Britain’s BBC and the US-funded Radio Free Europe/Radio Liberty had encouraged the riots. He also reproached government officials over the matter.