On May 23, 2021, Belarusian authorities forced a Ryanair flight from Athens, Greece to Vilnius, Lithuania to land in Minsk in response to a false bomb threat and then arrested Roman Protasevich, an exiled journalist onboard the flight. The United States joined much of the international community in condemning the flight's diversion and imposing additional sanctions on Belarusian President Alexander Lukashenko's regime, adding to those levied throughout the last year due to Lukashenko's repression of opposition figures and others who have protested the results of the August 2020 Belarusian election.
Since becoming president of Belarus in 1994,Footnote 1 Lukashenko has centralized power around himself, disbanding parliament and then handpicking a new one, jailing or exiling opposition leaders, and amending the constitution to abolish term limits.Footnote 2 Press and foreign leaders, including U.S. President George W. Bush,Footnote 3 have called him “Europe's last dictator.”Footnote 4
The United States deemed the 2006 elections, which netted Lukashenko over eighty percent of the vote,Footnote 5 “fundamentally undemocratic.”Footnote 6 The election results and the Lukashenko regime's heavy-handed response to domestic protests against them led President Bush to declare a national emergency and sanction Belarusian officials.Footnote 7 In 2008, the United States tightened sanctions due to Belarus's “worsening human rights abuses,” prompting Belarus to expel the U.S. ambassador and most other U.S. diplomats from the country.Footnote 8 Relations between Belarus and the United States had thawed a bit in recent years. In 2015, Lukashenko released political prisoners, and the United States suspended sanctions on state-owned entities.Footnote 9 In 2019, the countries announced an exchange of ambassadors, and Belarus promised additional progress on human rights issues.Footnote 10
In August 2020, however, Lukashenko won his sixth term in office in a highly disputed election, with the official tally showing that Lukashenko won eighty percent of the vote.Footnote 11 Prior to the election, authorities jailed two of Lukashenko's main opponents, and a third “was barred from running and lives in exile.”Footnote 12 Svetlana Tikhanovskaya, the wife of a jailed candidate, united the opposition camps and emerged as the main opposition candidate.Footnote 13 Tikhanovskaya rejected the official election results, which credited her with less than ten percent of the vote, and filed a formal complaint with the election committee.Footnote 14 After Belarusian authorities detained her, she fled to Lithuania, where she remains in exile.Footnote 15 U.S. Secretary of State Michael Pompeo called the elections “not free and fair,”Footnote 16 and European Union (EU) leaders refused to recognize the official results.Footnote 17
The disputed election prompted mass protests in Belarus.Footnote 18 As the protests increased in intensity and numbers throughout the fall, with 200,000 demonstrators attending an October rally in Minsk,Footnote 19 Belarusian security forces used “increasingly brutal” tactics against the demonstrators.Footnote 20 The UN Office of the High Commissioner for Human Rights reported hundreds of incidents of “torture and ill-treatment of people deprived of their liberty.”Footnote 21 While the Belarusian government claims that only one person died in the protests,Footnote 22 the number of casualties is likely higher, with media reports of at least four deathsFootnote 23 and, according to Tikhanovskaya, dozens missing.Footnote 24
The fraudulent election and the regime's subsequent crackdown on protesters prompted the United States, EU, and other allies to impose multiple rounds of sanctions and visa restrictions on Belarusian officials in the latter part of 2020 and into 2021.Footnote 25
International condemnation of the Lukashenko regime escalated significantly with the diversion of Ryanair Flight 4978 on May 23, 2021. Just before the plane crossed from Belarus into Lithuanian airspace en route from Athens, ground authorities notified the pilots of a bomb threat to the plane.Footnote 26 Although the flight was closer to Vilnius than Minsk, a Belarusian fighter jet intercepted the plane and escorted it to Minsk.Footnote 27 Upon landing, Belarusian security agents arrested passengers Roman Protasevich and his girlfriend Sofia Sapega, a Russian national.Footnote 28 Protasevich is a twenty-six-year-old Belarusian dissident who cofounded and edited NEXTA, a Telegram channel that Belarusian opposition members use to share information and organize protests.Footnote 29 Protasevich fled Belarus in 2019 and had been living in Lithuania.Footnote 30
No bomb was found on the plane,Footnote 31 and the email provider of the account from which the purported bomb threat originated later confirmed that the threat was sent after the flight was diverted to Minsk.Footnote 32 According to a Belarusian state-owned news channel, “Lukashenko had personally given the order to land the Ryanair passenger jet,” claiming that he believed that there was a bomb threat.Footnote 33 World leaders blamed the Lukashenko regime for the fake threat, with German Chancellor Angela Merkel calling “[a]ll explanations for the forced landing of the plane other than to detain Protasevich ‘ . . . completely implausible.’”Footnote 34
The flight diversion and Protasevich's arrest prompted swift international condemnation and attempts to safeguard aviation. European Commission President Ursula von der Leyen called the diversion a “state hijacking”Footnote 35 and said that the “outrageous and illegal behaviour of the regime in Belarus will have consequences.”Footnote 36 EU leaders quickly agreed to sanction the Lukashenko regime and prohibit flights by EU airlines over Belarusian airspace.Footnote 37 UK Foreign Secretary Dominic Raab also condemned the “actions by the Belarusian authorities, who arrested journalist Roman Protasevich on the basis of a ruse, having forced his flight to land in Minsk” and called for Lukashenko to “be held to account for his outlandish actions.”Footnote 38 NATO Secretary-General Jens Stoltenberg similarly called it a “serious & dangerous incident which requires international investigation.”Footnote 39 In a statement on May 23, U.S. Secretary of State Antony Blinken said:
The United States strongly condemns the forced diversion of a flight between two EU member states and the subsequent removal and arrest of journalist Raman Pratasevich in Minsk. We demand his immediate release. This shocking act perpetrated by the Lukashenka regime endangered the lives of more than 120 passengers, including U.S. citizens. Initial reports suggesting the involvement of the Belarusian security services and the use of Belarusian military aircraft to escort the plane are deeply concerning and require full investigation.
…Given indications the forced landing was based on false pretenses, we support the earliest possible meeting of the Council of the International Civil Aviation Organization to review these events.Footnote 40
The next day, President Joseph Biden called the incident “a direct affront to international norms.”Footnote 41 Biden noted with approval EU moves for economic sanctions and asked U.S. officials “to develop appropriate options to hold accountable those responsible, in close coordination with the European Union, other allies and partners, and international organizations.”Footnote 42 The Council of the International Civil Aviation Organization stated in May that it would pursue a “fact-finding investigation” into the incident.Footnote 43
In a statement on May 26, Lukashenko denied any wrongdoing, claiming that he “acted lawfully . . . according to all international rules”Footnote 44 and accusing Protasevich of plotting a “bloody rebellion.”Footnote 45 Russian Foreign Ministry Spokeswoman Maria Zakharova accused the West of hypocrisy, stating that “‘[i]t is shocking that the West calls the incident in Belarusian airspace ‘shocking,’” and noting, “‘[e]ither (they) should be shocked by . . . the forced (landing) in Austria of the Bolivian president's plane at the request of the United States. . . . Or (they) should not be shocked by similar behaviour by others.’”Footnote 46
On June 3, Protasevich appeared on Belarusian state TV with physical injuries and “appeared to confess to organizing ‘mass riots’—generating skepticism on the part of family members and human rights groups, who said that his demeanor and bruised face made clear that he had been coerced.”Footnote 47 A video of Sapega raised similar concerns about coercion.Footnote 48
Shortly thereafter, the EU and United States ratcheted up their responses. On June 4, the EU banned Belarusian airlines from flying over EU airspace,Footnote 49 and on June 8, President Biden renewed the national emergency relating to Belarus, which had been due to expire on June 16.Footnote 50 On June 21, the United States, Canada, the United Kingdom, and the EU issued a joint statement expressing their “deep concern regarding the Lukashenka regime's continuing attacks on human rights, fundamental freedoms, and international law” and announcing coordinated sanctions for the flight diversion and “the politically motivated arrest of journalist Raman Pratasevich and his companion Sofia Sapega, as well as to the continuing attack on human rights and fundamental freedoms.”Footnote 51 In a separate statement, Blinken noted that the coordinated sanctions “seek to promote accountability for the Lukashenka regime's transnational repression and its affronts to international norms.”Footnote 52 On June 24, the EU announced additional sanctions on the Belarusian economy, including, among other things, restricted access to EU capital markets, a prohibition on selling or supplying internet and telephone monitoring equipment to anyone in Belarus, and a ban on providing insurance to the Belarusian government.Footnote 53
On June 25, Protasevich and Sapega were transferred to house arrest as part of a plea deal in which they promised to work with Belarusian authorities to “expose their accomplices.”Footnote 54 Lukashenko continues to deny any wrongdoing, saying in an interview with state media on July 21 that Belarus “didn't force anyone to land in Minsk and . . . didn't change the flight routes.”Footnote 55 He claims that “[e]vents concerning the aircraft were a premeditated provocation … to enable further steps to choke Belarus and prevent its further development.”Footnote 56
The United States and its allies have expressed support for Belarusian opposition leader Svyatlana Tikhanovskaya. Tikhanovskaya met with President Biden at the White House on July 28Footnote 57 and with British Prime Minister Boris Johnson on August 3.Footnote 58 She also met with U.S. National Security Adviser Jake Sullivan, Blinken, and other State Department officials, and discussed “the need for the ongoing Lukashenka regime crackdown to end, along with the unconditional release of all political prisoners in Belarus, and an inclusive political dialogue and new presidential elections under international observation.”Footnote 59 Tikhanovskaya said that she gave the Biden administration a list of specific targets for sanctions,Footnote 60 but State Department Spokesperson Ned Price would not comment on whether such a list exists.Footnote 61 He said that the United States “remains[s] actively engaged” in the situation going forward, and that President Biden will consider increasing sanctions to address “the repression, the crackdown, and the continued imprisonment of political prisoners and political opponents” in Belarus.Footnote 62
In August 2021, the Lukashenko regime drew further international ire by trying to forcibly repatriate one of Belarus's Olympic athletes, Krystina Timanovskaya, from Japan after she criticized the Belarusian athletic federation on Instagram.Footnote 63 She sought protection from Japanese police at a Tokyo airport and eventually received asylum in Poland.Footnote 64 The international community condemned Belarus's actions, and the International Olympic Committee expelled two Belarusian coaches from the Olympics over their involvement in the affair.Footnote 65
On August 9, 2021—the one-year anniversary of the 2020 Belarusian election—the Biden administration, along with Canada and the United Kingdom, imposed further sanctions on the Lukashenko regime.Footnote 66 Pursuant to a new executive order that broadens the scope of the national emergency declared in 2006,Footnote 67 the Treasury Department announced sanctions on a number of individuals and entities, including Belaruskali OAO, “one of Belarus's largest state-owned enterprises” and “a source of illicit wealth for the regime,”Footnote 68 and the Belarusian National Olympic Committee, which is headed by Lukashenko's son.Footnote 69 The White House noted that since the diversion of the Ryanair flight, “the regime has only further expanded it[s] repression, including by threatening the safety of an Olympic athlete outside its borders,” and that with the additional sanctions, “President Biden is abiding by his pledge to hold the Belarussian regime accountable for its abuses.”Footnote 70