The clashes took place near Minsk’s musical comedy theater as dozens
of opposition supporters were heading toward the Akrestsyna detention
center.
Riot police blocked the road leading to Akrestsyna, and beat their shields with truncheons while they advanced on the crowd.
Some Causalties Reported
An
RFE/RL Belarus Service correspondent reports he heard several
explosions of undetermined origin as police was charging. He says he
saw people lying on the ground.
Television footage broadcast on Georgia's Imedi TV shows men carrying a form lying on a stretcher.
A
man told RFE/RL's Belarus Service that police were using indiscriminate
violence. "They’re kicking women," one witness said. "This is
outrageous. They’re real fascists!"
Police Accuse Demonstrators Of Starting The Violence
In
remarks carried by the official Belta news agency, Interior Minister
Uladzimir Navumau said demonstrators attacked police forces first,
"throwing bottles and other objects." He also denied responsibility for
the explosions, saying they wounded one civilian and eight security
officers.
A demonstrator on the ground during the March 25 unrest (RFE/RL)
Opposition leader Alyaksandr Kazulin, who was leading the march, was detained.
Navumau accused Kazulin of calling upon demonstrators to seize state buildings and overthrow Belarus's government.
In
comments made to RFE/RL's Belarus Service, the wife of another
opposition leader, Alyaksandr Milinkevich, denied reports that her
husband, too, was detained.
Milinkevich's spokesman Pavel Mazhejka was briefly detained.
Earlier Demonstration Ended Peacefully
Earlier,
both Milinkevich and Kazulin were addressing a crowd of several
thousand on Yanka Kupala Square to demand that the outcome of the March
19 presidential polls be annulled.
Election officials say
incumbent President Alyaksandr Lukashenka won a landslide win with
nearly 83 percent of the votes. Milinkevich came second with 6 percent
and Kazulin came last with 2.2 percent. The opposition, however, says
the vote was rigged.
Milinkevich told supporters today a new vote should be held "without Lukashenka."
He
vowed that the Belarusian president-elect -- who is due to be
inaugurated for his new five-year term on March 31 -- would be gone by
the end of the term. He also announced the creation of what he
described as a "national movement for the liberation of Belarus."
'Shame On Them!'
"They
have been hiding in their offices and they think they won the
elections," Milinkevich said. "But this is a Pyrrhic victory. This is
the beginning of the end of those who lie, who cannot talk to people,
who use force against people and beat them. Shame on them!
Addressing
foreign reporters earlier today near the Akrestsyna detention center,
Milinkevich had called upon authorities to refrain from violence,
vowing in turn to hold a peaceful demonstration:
"I hope
[authorities] won't [use force]," Milinkevich said. "I believe there
are also reasonable people on their side. When [a government]
constantly resorts to forcible methods, it first of all testifies to
its weakness -- after all they need to prove they are worth something
as men -- and, second, it shows that its end is nearing. A country
cannot be ruled by these methods, there has to be dialogue,
partnership. But they've forgotten what that is. For them [the upcoming
rally] is like a final test, a final warning. But we'll be peaceful,
this I promise, there won't be any taking of the Bastille."
The
March 25 rally was initially due to take place on October
(Kastrychnitskaya) Square, where protest rallies had taken place for
most of the week that followed election day.
But security
forces had cleared the square on March 24, arresting scores of
protesters. Earlier today, they had blocked all access to October
Square, forcing demonstrators to move onto Yanka Kupala Square, in a
nearby park.
March 24 Arrests
Belarus's
Belapan independent news agency today quoted rights campaigners as
saying no less than 328 people were arrested during the March 24 sweep.
This figure could not be officially confirmed.
Also today,
Belapan reported the head of Milinkevich's election campaign staff in
the city of Brest was also arrested on March 24. Dzmitry Shymanski was
first arrested 10 days ago on charges of participating in an
unsanctioned opposition rally and had just been released from police
custody when he was arraigned again, this time for "hooliganism."