Belarus frees 123 prisoners as the US lifts potash sanctions

BBC
BBC
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Belarus released prisoners as the US lifted potash sanctions, signaling a thaw despite EU non-recognition of Lukashenko.
Belarus frees 123 prisoners as the US lifts potash sanctions
A What happened
Belarus has freed 123 prisoners, including prominent opposition figure Maria Kolesnikova and Nobel laureate Ales Bialiatski, after the US agreed to lift sanctions on potash, a vital export product. The decision followed talks led by US envoy John Coale and represents a significant shift in US policy towards engagement with Belarus. Despite this, the EU continues to reject Lukashenko’s presidency and maintain sanctions due to political repression and Belarus’s facilitation of Russia’s invasion of Ukraine. This US move could alter Belarus’s international isolation and reshape Western approaches to Minsk amid geopolitical tensions in Eastern Europe.

Key insights

  • 1

    US shifts from sanctions to engagement with Belarus: The US decision to lift potash sanctions indicates a strategic move toward restoring relations with Belarus, diverging from the EU’s persistence in sanctioning and isolating Lukashenko’s regime.

  • 2

    Sanctions linked to Belarus’s geopolitical role: The sanctions and prisoner releases are tied to Belarus’s controversial support for Russia’s invasion of Ukraine, showing how geopolitical alliances affect international pressure and dialogue.

  • 3

    Belarus’s domestic repression remains a key concern: Despite prisoner releases, ongoing political repression and the EU’s refusal to recognize Lukashenko highlight enduring governance and human rights issues unresolved by the US-Belarus agreement.

Takeaways

The US decision to lift sanctions and Belarus’s release of prisoners represent a recalibration in their bilateral relations, raising questions about the future of Western responses to Belarus’s domestic policies and geopolitical positioning.

Topics

World & Politics Policy & Regulation International Affairs Diplomacy Human Rights Trade & Tariffs

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