Protesters and riot police have clashed in Belarus’ capital Minsk and other cities, after a state TV exit poll said long-time leader Alexander Lukashenko was re-elected in Sunday’s election.
In Minsk, the police used stun grenades to disperse crowds in the city centre. There have been reports of injuries.
The state TV exit poll showed that Mr Lukashenko won nearly 80% of the vote.
Main opposition candidate Svetlana Tikhanovskaya said she did not trust the figures which gave her 7%.
“I believe my eyes, and I see that the majority is with us,” she said at a news conference on Sunday evening.
The opposition had said it expected the vote to be rigged, saying it would keep an alternative count of the votes.
Ms Tikhanovskaya, 37, entered the election in place of her jailed husband and went on to lead large opposition rallies.
Mr Lukashenko, in power since 1994, has vowed that the situation in the country will remain “under control”.
The lead-up to Sunday’s poll saw a crackdown on activists and journalists amid the country’s biggest opposition demonstrations in years.
What’s happening in Belarus now?
In Minsk, clashes were reported near the Minsk-Hero City monument in the city centre late on Sunday.
Witnesses and correspondents say the riot police used rubber bullets and water cannon to disperse demonstrators.
Several ambulances have been seen rushing to the scene.
Footage has emerged of protesters fighting riot police in the capital, and media reports say a number of people have been arrested.
Referring to Mr Lukashenko, crowds on the streets have been chanting “Go away!”
Similar protests were staged in the cities of Brest and Zhodino.
Internet monitoring group NetBlocks earlier said connectivity had been “significantly disrupted” across Belarus, with the situation worsening throughout the day and creating an “information vacuum”.
The confrontation on the streets of Minsk largely ended after several hours, with the authorities saying that “police are in control of the situation”, state news agency Belta reported.
What’s the context?
Sometimes referred to as Europe’s last dictator, President Lukashenko, 65, was first elected in 1994.
In the last vote in 2015, he was declared winner with 83.5% of the vote. There were no serious challengers and election observers reported problems in the counting and tabulation of votes.
This year’s election is being held amid growing signs of frustration at his leadership.
The campaign saw the rise of Ms Tikhanovskaya, a former teacher who became a stay-at-home mother until she was thrust into the political spotlight.
After her husband was arrested and blocked from registering for the vote, she stepped in to take his place.
In the lead-up to the election she told the BBC that people in Belarus did not believe the election would be run fairly.
“But I still believe that our president will understand that his time is over. People don’t want him anymore,” she said.
President Lukashenko has dismissed Ms Tikhanovskaya as a “poor little girl”, manipulated by foreign “puppet masters”.
Tens of thousands defied an escalating crackdown on the opposition last month to attend a protest in the capital Minsk, the largest such demonstration in a decade.
Since the start of the election campaign in May, more than 2,000 people have been detained, according to Human Rights Centre Viasna.
On the eve of the vote Ms Tikhanovskaya’s team said her campaign manager had been arrested and would not be released until Monday.
And on Sunday, as people voted, internet service was “significantly disrupted”, according to online monitor NetBlocks. Opposition supporters say this makes it harder for evidence of election fraud to be collected and shared.
There were already concerns over a lack of scrutiny because observers were not invited to monitor the election and more than 40% of votes were cast ahead of election day.
Was anyone else running?
There were three other candidates:
- Anna Kanopatskaya, a former MP who won a rare seat for the opposition in parliamentary elections in 2016
- Sergei Cherechen, the leader of the Social Democrat party
- Andrei Dmitriyev, the co-chair of the Tell the Truth movement, a campaign group which has been raided by the authorities
Two key opposition figures were barred from running and threw their weight behind Ms Tikhanovskaya’s campaign.
One of them, Valery Tsepkalo, fled Belarus ahead of the contest, fearing arrest. His wife Veronika stayed behind, becoming a key campaigner for Mrs Tikhanovskaya.
It emerged on Sunday that Mrs Tsepkalo had also now left Belarus for Moscow, for “safety” reasons.
Anger towards Mr Lukashenko’s government has been in part fuelled by the response to coronavirus.
The president has downplayed the outbreak, advising citizens to drink vodka and use saunas to fight the disease.
Belarus, which has a population of 9.5 million, has had nearly 70,000 confirmed cases and 600 deaths.
Source: BBC