Belarus leader Lukashenko accuses EU of "hybrid war" over response to hijacking

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Fadel Allassan
·1 min read
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Belarus strongman Aleksandr Lukashenko, who diverted a passenger airplane carrying a journalist and government dissident on board this week, defended his actions Wednesday as necessary to quell a bomb threat, AP reports.

Why it matters: The incident, which EU leaders have called a "hijacking," has drawn international condemnation and further isolated Lukashenko, who is often referred to as "Europe's last dictator."

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Driving the news: EU nations have banned Belarusian airlines, told European airlines not to fly over the country, and promised more economic sanctions. Lukashenko described the retaliation as a “hybrid war” to “strangle” Belarus.

  • “Our ill-wishers outside and inside the country have changed their methods of attacking the state,” Lukashenko said Wednesday. “That’s why they switched from organizing riots to trying to strangle us.”

  • “I acted in a lawful way, protecting people in line with international rules,” Lukashenko claimed.

Catch up quick: The plane was in Belarusian airspace headed to Lithuania when pilots were told to land in Minsk — and escorted there by a Belarusian fighter jet — because of “a potential security threat on board," according a statement from Ryanair.

  • Journalist Raman Protasevich, a prominent opposition figure living in exile, reportedly told other passengers he was facing the death penalty before he was arrested during the stop. No bomb was found on board.

  • Lukashenko said it was an “absolute lie” that the fighter jet forced the Ryanair plane to land.

  • The CEO of Ryanair described the incident as a "state-sponsored hijacking."

Go deeper: Biden says U.S. to coordinate with EU on Belarus response

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