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- Rusakovich Andrei Vladimirovich
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- Shadurski Victor Gennadievich
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Conference Proceedings
- Amber Coast Transport Initiative Project Concept
- Nato and Belarus - partnership, past tensions and future possibilities
- OSCE High-Level Seminar on Military Doctrine
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- Polish-Belarussian Transborder Customs Cooperation: сurrent Problems and Challenges
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Reports
- We see the significant reduction of the U.S. Army in Europe
- NATO's International Security Role
- International seminar on issues in the Collective Security Treaty Organization
- Belarus-Turkey: The ways of cooperation - 2011
- Belarus - Poland: two decades of international relations
- Belarus-Turkey: The ways of cooperation - 2009
- International seminar Belarusian Diaspora: Past and Present
- The first Round Table
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News Releases
- The conference on Overcoming the financial crisis
- Round Table on history and future of Belarus-Poland cooperation
- Seminar on Belarusian diaspora: past and present
- The conference on Belarus in the Modern World
- The conference on Economic, legal and informational aspects of cooperation in customs sphere
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Belarusian President Alexander Lukashenko’s comment that he’d “rather be a dictator than gay”
prompted a rebuke from the German government, which said the
statement was proof of the leader’s authoritarian style.
Lukashenko made the comment to journalists yesterday at a
sporting event outside the Belarusian capital, Minsk, calling
accusations that he ran a dictatorship “hysteria,” according
to a transcript posted on the president’s website. While
Lukashenko didn’t say to whom his comments were directed, he
drew comparisons between German and Polish policy toward the
former Soviet state.
German Foreign Minister Guido Westerwelle, who is openly
gay, on Feb. 29 called Lukashenko’s government the “last
dictatorship in Europe” after Belarus recalled its permanent
envoy to the European Union and ambassador to Poland. His remark
mirrored comments first made in 2005 in reference to Belarus by
then U.S. Secretary of State Condoleezza Rice.
“It’s interesting in one sense that Lukashenko should
consider himself a dictator, a conclusion the German government
reached long ago -- and the Belarusian president provides proof
of its accuracy on a daily basis,” Steffen Seibert, chief
German government spokesman, told reporters today in Berlin.
German Foreign Ministry spokesman Andreas Peschke told the
same briefing that Lukashenko’s comments “unfortunately speak
for themselves.”
The spat flared up last week after the government in Minsk
made the recalls in response to increased EU sanctions. Belarus
also asked the Polish ambassador and the head of the EU’s
mission to leave Minsk.