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Reference ID | Created | Released | Classification | Origin |
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10MINSK59 | 2010-02-28 15:40 | 2011-08-30 01:44 | UNCLASSIFIED | Embassy Minsk |
VZCZCXRO5335 RR RUEHIK DE RUEHSK #0059/01 0591540 ZNR UUUUU ZZH R 281540Z FEB 10 FM AMEMBASSY MINSK TO RUEHC/SECSTATE WASHDC 0699 INFO RUEHZG/NATO EU COLLECTIVE RUCNCIS/CIS COLLECTIVE RUEHVEN/USMISSION USOSCE 0053 RUCPDOC/DEPT OF COMMERCE WASHINGTON DC RUEATRS/DEPT OF TREASURY WASHINGTON DC RHEHAAA/NSC WASHINGTON DC RHEFDIA/DIA WASHINGTON DC RUEAIIA/CIA WASHDC RUEHSK/AMEMBASSY MINSK 0709
UNCLAS SECTION 01 OF 04 MINSK 000059 SIPDIS STATE FOR EUR/UMB (ASHEMA), DRL (DNADEL), AND EUR/ACE (KSALINGER) EMBASSY KYIV FOR USAID (JRIORDAN AND KMONAGHAN) E.O. 12958: N/A TAGS: PGOV PREL PHUM ECON ENRG ETRD BO SUBJECT: BELARUS BI-WEEKLY POL/ECON REPORT - FEBRUARY 26, 2009 MINSK 00000059 001.3 OF 004 ¶1. The following are brief items of interest compiled by Embassy Minsk. TABLE OF CONTENTS Civil Society ------------- - GOB Crackdown on Polish Minority Sparks Flash Point with EU - The Aggressive Suppression of Peaceful Demonstrations Returns - New Election Law But GOB Control of Election Commission Endures - State Media is Encouraged to Criticize Opposition Candidates Economy ------- - Belarus Accepts New Russian Oil Tariff, But Only for Six Months - Gazprom Now Has 50% of Beltransgaz, But May Want Majority - IMF Most Likely To Issue Final SBA Tranche in late March - Belarus Suspends Unilateral WTO Accession Talks Quote of the Week ----------------- ------------- Civil Society ------------- ¶2. GOB Crackdown on the Polish Minority Sparks Flash Point with EU During his meeting with Polish Foreign Minister Radoslaw Sikorski in Kyiv on February 25, President Lukashenka termed the conflict between Polish minority groups in Belarus a "misunderstanding" that would be resolved. He stated that there were no bilateral problems stemming from differences between the Union of Poles of Belarus (UPB) recognized by the GOB and the Warsaw-backed UPB. Sikorski said that Lukashenka had agreed to set up an expert group to study the issue of Belarus' Polish minority. The meeting came as a European Parliament (EP) delegation arrived in Minsk on February 25 for a three-day fact-finding mission. The delegation will meet with GOB officials, representatives of civil society, and opposition forces. The mission is expected to issue a report based on its findings that will be incorporated into an EP resolution on the human rights situation in Belarus. The report will also include recommendations on membership of a Belarus' delegation to the EU-Neighborhood East Parliamentary Assembly Euronest to be comprised of ten participants with observer status, likely representing MPs and civil society and opposition parties, a position the GOB opposes. Anzhelika Borys, Leader of the Warsaw-backed UPB, was in Brussels and Warsaw recently for a series of meetings with EP members and the Polish President who expressed solidarity with the Polish minority in Belarus. Borys explained that the GOB has sought "to present it as an internal conflict in order to distract peoples' attention, so that the issue is not seen in the context of human rights." The Spokesperson for Catherine Ashton, the EU's High Representative on foreign policy, expressed EU FMs' concerns about the human rights situation in Belarus and announced that the EU will "remain vigilant and continue to raise the issue." In addition, Ashton condemned police action against the Warsaw-backed union and what she called "attempts by authorities to impose a new leadership on the Polish community." Critical statements and yet another round of confrontation between the official and unrecognized unions stemmed from the February 17 GOB ruling that ordered Borys' union to vacate the Polish House in Ivyanets. In addition, Borys was sentenced February 15 to a $365 fine for participating in an unsanctioned demonstration in Hrodna on February 10 in support of Teresa Sobal, the ousted manager of the Ivyanets Polish House. Borys' three senior associates received five-day jail sentences for similar charges on February ¶15. A senior Polish MFA official was quoted on February 19 as saying that all the 16 Polish Houses in Belarus should be under control of the Borys' union. Only two of the Polish Houses, which serve as social and cultural centers, still remain outside control of the GOB-controlled union. ¶3. The Aggressive Suppression of Peaceful Demonstrations Returns After permitting the monthly Solidarity Day demonstrations to take place this fall (reftel Minsk 024), authorities cracked down aggressively, manhandling and arresting demonstrators, as MINSK 00000059 002.3 OF 004 activists attempted to stage three public protests in February. Belarus security forces arrested 29 democratic activists demonstrating in downtown Minsk on February 16 in remembrance of opposition leaders who disappeared in 1999-2000. Police for the first time grabbed people as they approached the venue dragged them off to waiting vans, while others were arrested in the square a few minutes later. Only two of the several dozen policemen on site were in uniform. Officers in plainclothes used force against journalists, blocking photo and video cameras, and pushing them away from the demonstrators. In a separate incident on February 14, police broke up a St. Valentine's Day march staged by the Malady Front and arrested 22 activists, including four legal minors. Young Belarus and European Belarus civil groups held three rallies at different venues on February 8 in support of the two Vaukavysk activists, Mikalay Autukhovich and Uladzimir Asipenka, who have been held in pretrial detention on terrorism charges since February 8, ¶2009. Approximately 20 activists from those groups were detained. On all three days, people detained were eventually released without charges but many reported being fingerprinted and recorded on video and complained of suffering bruises and scratches while in police detention, as well being threatened verbally. ¶4. New Election Law But GOB Control of Election Commission Endures At a press conference on February 1, Central Election Commission (CEC) Chairwoman Lidziya Yarmoshyna said that for the April 25 local elections 1,495 territorial election commissions covering regional, town, and village councils have been established in Belarus, with a total membership of 11,697. Of those, 51.9 percent were nominated through the collection of voter signatures, 35.3 percent were nominated by NGOs and political parties, and 12.8 percent by "workers' collectives." The requirement that one-third of commissions' membership be nominated by NGOs and political parties is a new requirement in the electoral law. However, as it has turned out only 105 persons or 0.9 percent of the total territorial commission members are affiliated with political parties; and of these only 15 represent opposition parties, including nine with the Spravedlivy Mir Belarusian Party of the Left, four with the United Civic Party, and two with the Belarusian Social Democratic Party Hramada. There are 4,024 NGO members on the territorial commission, but the vast majority are associated with the state-controlled NGOs or associations such as Belaya Rus, National Youth Union, Women's Union, Veterans' Union, Federation of Trade Unions and others. Independent observers concluded that the overwhelming majority of territorial commission members had served on commissions during previous elections campaigns in Belarus and described them as "ideologically" loyal to the regime. At the district level, there are 367 elections commissions (covering Oblast/Regional councils and the Minsk city council). The district commissions have a total of 4,542 members, of whom 43 percent were nominated by NGOs, mostly GOB-controlled, 18.2 percent by "workers' collectives," 6.7 percent by political parties; 32.1 percent sought membership through the collection of signatures. Of the political party representatives, only 72 come from opposition parties. The deadline for establishment of precinct-level electoral commissions is March 7. ¶5. State Media is Encouraged to Criticize Opposition Candidates On February 16, CEC Chairwoman Yarmoshyna stated at a workshop on the role of the media in the election process that state media have the right to criticize "opposition candidates" during the election campaign. The First Deputy Head of the Presidential Administration Natallya Pyatkevich echoed her remarks, saying that any journalist has the right to hold an opinion and "report" it. It is up to the journalist to do this "correctly," she said, arguing that the interest of freedom of information should be counterbalanced by responsibility on the part of reporters. ------- Economy ------- ¶6. Belarus Accepts New Russian Oil Tariff, But Only for Six Months MINSK 00000059 003.3 OF 004 Lukashenka issued an edict on February 12 approving the January 27 bilateral agreement on oil imports from Russia. Russian President Medvedev signed the amendments into law on February ¶15. According to the new agreement, Belarus will receive 6.3 million tons of Russian oil duty-free in 2010 for internal use; but additional supplies for refinement and export to any market other than Russia will be subject to a 100% export duty. Russian duty-free quota for Belarus may be reduced if Belarus imposes additional transit duties on Russian oil passing through Belarus to Europe. Domestic consumption of crude oil for each year will be adjusted by October 1. While Lukashenka made no public comments after signing the amendments, some senior GOB officials have repeatedly argued that the export duty applied to Russian oil supplies to Belarus violates Russia's commitments under principles of the Custom Union of Belarus, Russian and Kazakhstan. Belarus' Deputy Foreign Minister Andrei Yevdochenko announced on February 16 that Belarus will insist that the export duty be abolished starting July 1, 2010, when the single Customs Union is scheduled to become operational. In the meantime, the GOB is looking for ways maintain the profitability of the country's two oil refineries, which are facing serious difficulty in adjusting to terms of the new oil supply agreement with Russia. IMF has calculated that GOB will lose no less than $2 billion dollars in revenues since it is no longer able to pocket the difference between the subsidized oil it use to receive from Russia, and the refined petroleum products it sold mainly to Europe at market rates. ¶7. Gazprom Now Has 50% of Beltransgaz, But May Want Majority According to media reports, Russia's Gazprom transferred $625 million on February 24 for 12.5% stock in the Beltransgaz natural gas transportation company, thus increasing its stake in Beltransgaz to 50%. This was the final tranche under $2.5 billion agreement signed on May 18, 2007. On February 25, the Russian Ambassador to Belarus Alexander Surikov told the press that Gazprom is interested in acquiring a controlling stake in OAO Beltransgaz. "If Gazprom paid for 50% in Beltransgaz, it definitely wants to have more. What other reason is there to buy a 50% stake?" he explained. On a separate issue, according to the First Deputy Director of Beltransgaz Sorokhan, Belarus did pay for Russian gas delivered in January 2010 under the terms outlined in the five-year gas supply contract signed with Gazprom in 2006, that will remove Russian subsidies on gas in full by 2011. The average import price Belarus paid in 2009 was $148 per 1,000 cubic meters. In the first quarter of 2010, Belarus will pay $168, and given the current trends in world prices, expects the price to go up $4 in the 2nd quarter "unless we have contract adjustments," the official explained. Belarus has already been forced to raise natural gas prices for its industrial consumers by 25% to $217.7 per 1,000 cubic meters. The country imported a total of 17.6 billion cubic meters of Russian natural gas in 2009 - 20.4% short of the agreed volume, but Gazprom, according to Russian Ambassador to Belarus Alexander Surikov, is not likely to seek compensation from Belarus for importing less than agreed. At the same time, Belarus' Deputy Foreign Minister A ndrei Yevdochenko stated on February 16 that Belarus objected to the Gazprom's monopoly of gas supply within the Belarusian, Russian, and Kazakhstani Customs Union. Commenting on the wish of the Belarusian authorities to revise Gazprom's monopoly on gas supplies to Belarus the Russian Ambassador said that Belarus must respect the monopoly of Russia's Gazprom on natural gas export. When Belarusian monopoly exporters supply tractors and trucks to Russia, "this is considered normal but when a single Russian exporter supplies natural gas, it is considered wrong," he argued ¶8. IMF Most Likely To Issue Final SBA Tranche in late March An IMF staff mission and the GOB have reached an agreement, subject to approval by the IMF Executive Board at the end of March, on completion of the fourth and final review of the $3.52 billion Stand-By Arrangement (SBA) with Belarus, the IMF announced. The final tranche is valued at approximately $700 million under the current SBA. According to the IMF staff mission statement, "performance under the economic program supported by the SBA has been good. All end-December performance criteria and structural benchmarks were met~ The recent agreement with Russia on the pricing of imported crude oil, in the absence of any offsetting measures, would widen significantly the current account deficit and the general government deficit. The government is taking strong actions to MINSK 00000059 004.3 OF 004 contain the effects of the oil price increase on the budget and the balance of payments, and Fund staff support these measures. Monetary policy and, more specifically, further tightening of the limits on lending under government programs would support the credibility of the exchange rate regime. The current exchange rate regime remains appropriate~ The authorities made good progress on the financial sector issues~ The privatization process has been slower than expected and the authorities need to step it up to reduce government intervention in the economy and to attract foreign direct investment. The mission reached understandings with the authorities on the measures which would move the privatization process forward~ The authorities expressed interest in continued cooperation with the IMF after the expiration of the current program. A possible follow-up program with the Fund could be considered upon the completion of the current [15-month] SBA." The estimated external financial gap that GOB will face in 2010 is $2 billion. ¶9. Belarus Suspends Unilateral WTO Accession Talks Belarus Foreign Ministry official, Anton Kudasaw, announced on February 19 that the WTO will soon take up consideration of the possibility of Belarus, Kazakhstan and Russia jointly joining WTO as a single Customs Union. A negotiating team has been formed to hold consultations with WTO members on the simultaneous accession of the three countries. "Our side is suspending unilateral negotiations on accession to the WTO," the official explained. Negotiations may begin after WTO members study the explanatory notes for the Customs Union that are expected to be submitted soon. ----------------- Quote of the Week ----------------- ¶10. Speaking at the seminar for ideology officials of Minsk region on February 17 the Fist Deputy Head of the Presidential Administration Natalia Petkevich said: "Political and economic culture of Belarusians has grown. As a result, their attitude to life and the world has become more critical. In this context, ideology methods should change. They should not be prohibitive. One should act subtler, wiser and more cunningly~ We need an informal approach. The time of slogans is gone. We should proceed from life and follow the needs of people. If they need information, you should give it to them. Otherwise, they will get it from other sources~ Let the information originate from ideology services rather than opposition websites." SCANLAN
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