Belarus tells U.S. ambassador to leave country


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The Associated Press

Published: March 7, 2008

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MINSK, Belarus <http://www.iht.com/articles/2008/03/07/europe/belarus.php> :
The Belarussian Foreign Ministry told the U.S. ambassador on Friday to leave
the country and recalled its own ambassador from Washington over economic
sanctions imposed by the United States on the former Soviet nation last
year.

The State Department spokesman, Tom Casey, told reporters that Ambassador
Karen Stewart had not been formally expelled.

"The Belarussian government has suggested - I think that's the polite phrase
- that she return to the United States for consultations," he said, adding
that Stewart would stay in Minsk while the situation was reviewed.

"If the Belarussian government wishes to shoot itself in the foot, they're
welcome to do so," Casey said.

The Belarussian Foreign Ministry said its demand that the nvoy leave had
been prompted by U.S. sanctions imposed last fall against Belarus's
state-controlled oil-processing and chemicals company, Belneftekhim.
Washington froze te company's assets and barred U.S. companies from doing
business with it.

The Foreign Ministry in Minsk said that Belarus had warned the United States
in advance that its response to the sanctions would be "harsh."

A spokesman for President George W. Bush called the move Friday unjustified
and said it "only takes them further away from Europe and the rest of the
world."

"It is unfortunate that Belarus continues its repressive actions against its
own citizens, and President Bush and the United States will continue to
stand with the people of Belarus as they seek to live in freedom," said a
Bush spokesman, Gordon Johndroe.

Washington also has slapped travel restrictions on Belarus's authoritarian
president, Alexander Lukashenko, and members of his inner circle, as well as
financial sanctions against Belarussian authorities over their crackdown on
opposition and free media.

The United States and the European Union, which also introduced economic and
travel sanctions against Belarus, have made clear that Lukashenko must free
political prisoners and allow more democratic freedoms before sanctions can
be lifted and relations normalized.

Lukashenko cast the release of several opposition activists this year as a
good-will gesture to the West.

The U.S. State Department welcomed the releases of opposition activists as
positive steps, but urged Lukashenko to free another opposition leader,
Alexander Kozulin, who challenged Lukashenko in the 2006 presidential
election, as a condition to start a dialogue on normalizing ties.
Belarussian authorities allowed Kozulin to attend his wife's funeral, but
then put him back behind bars.

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