First term (1994–2001) A new
Belarusian constitution enacted in early 1994 paved the way for the first democratic
presidential election on 23 June and 10 July. Six candidates stood in the first round, including Lukashenko, who campaigned as an independent on a populist platform. In an interview with
The New York Times, he declared, "I am neither with the leftists nor the rightists. But with the people against those who rob and deceive them."
Stanislav Shushkevich and
Vyacheslav Kebich also ran, with the latter regarded as the clear favourite. Lukashenko won 45.1% of the vote while Kebich received 17.4%,
Zianon Pazniak received 12.9% and Shushkevich, along with two other candidates, received less than 10% of the cast votes. The presidential inauguration was held in the halls of the
Government House on 20 July 1994, exactly ten days after the election, during a special meeting of the parliament, the
Supreme Council. Shortly after his inauguration, he addressed the
State Duma of the
Russian Federation in Moscow, proposing a new Union of
Slavic states, which would culminate in the creation of the
Union of Russia and Belarus in 1999. In February 1995, Lukashenko announced his intention to hold a referendum. For the young democratic republic, this raised the controversial issue of the
Russification of Belarus. Lukashenko said he would press ahead with the referendum regardless of opposition in the Supreme Council and threatened to suspend its activities if it did not agree to hold the referendum. On 11 April 1995, a vote was held in parliament on calling a referendum on four issues proposed by Lukashenko: 1) granting Russian the status of a state language, 2) changing state symbols, 3) on economic integration with Russia, and 4) on giving the president the right to dissolve parliament. The deputies rejected all the issues, except for that which regarded economic integration with Russia. It is unclear whether the president had legal power to call referendums independently, and if so, whether they would be binding. Lukashenko stated that the referendum would be held despite the rejection by the deputies. In protest, 19 out of a total of 238 deputies of the
Belarusian Popular Front led by Zianon Pazniak and the
Belarusian Social Democratic Assembly led by
Oleg Trusov (b. Алег Анатолевіч Трусаў) began a hunger strike in the parliamentary meeting room and stayed there overnight on the night of 11–12 April. At night, under the pretext of a bomb threat, unidentified law enforcement personnel attacked and forcibly expelled the deputies. Lukashenko stated that he personally ordered the evacuation for security purposes. The Supreme Council agreed to hold the referendum on 13 April, and in May 1995, Belarusian authorities held a
referendum on the four issues. The
Parliamentary Assembly of the Organisation for Security and Co-operation in Europe found neither the referendum nor the
1995 Belarusian parliamentary election, which took place in the same month, to have met the minimal requirements for free and fair elections. and Belarusian president Lukashenko, 1997 In the summer of 1996, deputies of the 199-member Belarusian parliament signed a petition to impeach Lukashenko on charges of violating the Constitution. Shortly after that, a
referendum was held on 24 November 1996 in which four questions were offered by Lukashenko and three offered by a group of Parliament members. The questions ranged from social issues, including changing the country's
Independence Day to 3 July (the date of
the liberation of Minsk from
Nazi forces in 1944) and the abolition of the death penalty, to the national constitution. As a result of the referendum, the constitution that was amended by Lukashenko was accepted, while the one amended by the Supreme Council was voided. On 25 November, it was announced that 70.5% of voters, of an 84% turnout, had approved the amended constitution. The US and the EU, however, refused to accept the referendum's legitimacy. After the referendum, Lukashenko convened a new parliamentary assembly from those members of the parliament who were loyal to him. After between ten and twelve deputies withdrew their signatures from the impeachment petition, only about forty deputies of the old parliament were left, and the Supreme Council was dismissed by Lukashenko. Nevertheless, international organisations and most Western countries refuse to recognise the current parliament because of the (unjust and illegal) manner in which it was formed. Lukashenko was elected chairman of the
Belarusian Olympic Committee in 1997. At the start of 1998, the
Central Bank of Russia suspended trading of the
Belarusian ruble, which led to a collapse in the value of the currency. Lukashenko responded by taking control of the
National Bank of the Republic of Belarus, sacking the entire bank leadership, and blaming the West for the currency's free-fall. and
Leonid Kuchma at the
Slavic Bazaar in Vitebsk in 2001|232x232px Lukashenko blamed foreign governments for conspiring against him and, in April 1998, expelled ambassadors from the Drazdy complex near Minsk and moved them to another building. The
Drazdy conflict caused an international outcry and resulted in a travel ban on Lukashenko from both the EU and the US. Although the ambassadors eventually returned after the controversy died down, Lukashenko stepped up his rhetorical attacks against the West. He stated that Western governments were trying to undermine Belarus at all levels, even sports, during the
1998 Winter Olympics in
Nagano, Japan. Upon the outbreak of the
Kosovo War in 1999, Lukashenko suggested to Yugoslav President
Slobodan Milošević that
Yugoslavia join the
Union of Russia and Belarus.
Second term (2001–2006) Under the original constitution, Lukashenko should have been up for reelection in 1999. However, the 1996 referendum extended Lukashenko's term for two additional years. In the 9 September 2001 election, Lukashenko faced
Vladimir Goncharik and
Sergei Gaidukevich. During the campaign, Lukashenko promised to raise the standards of farming and social benefits as well as increase Belarus's industrial output. Lukashenko won in the first round with 75.65% of the vote. The
Organisation for Security and Co-operation in Europe (OSCE) said the election process "failed to meet international standards". After the results were announced, declaring Lukashenko the winner, Russia publicly welcomed Lukashenko's re-election; the Russian president,
Vladimir Putin, telephoned Lukashenko and offered a message of congratulations and support. This action, along with arms deals with
Iraq and
Iran, prompted Western governments to take a tougher stance against Lukashenko. The US was particularly angered by the arms sales, and US political leaders increasingly began to refer to Belarus as "Europe's last dictatorship". The EU was concerned for the security of its gas supplies from Russia, which are piped through Belarus, and took an active interest in Belarusian affairs. With the accession of
Poland,
Latvia, and
Lithuania, the EU's border with Belarus has grown to more than 1000 kilometers. During a televised address to the nation on 7 September 2004, Lukashenko announced plans for a referendum to eliminate presidential term limits. This was held on 17 October 2004, the same day as parliamentary elections, and, according to official results, was approved by 79.42% of voters. Previously, Lukashenko had been limited to two terms and thus would have been constitutionally required to step down after the presidential elections in 2006. Opposition groups, the
OSCE, the
European Union, and the
US State Department stated that the vote fell short of international standards. Belarus grew economically under Lukashenko, but much of this growth was due to Russian crude oil, which was imported at below-market prices, refined, and sold to other European countries at a profit. Lukashenko reacted by saying that anyone going to opposition protests would have their necks wrung "as one might a duck". Belarusian authorities vowed to prevent any large-scale demonstrations following the election (such as those that marked the
Orange Revolution in Ukraine). Despite their efforts, the opposition had the largest number of demonstrators in years, with nightly protests in Minsk continuing for a number of days after the election. The largest protest occurred on election night; reporters for the
Associated Press estimated that approximately 10,000 people turned out. Election observers from the Russia-led Commonwealth of Independent States (CIS) and the Organisation for Security and Co-operation in Europe (OSCE) differed on the Belarusian election. , Belarus. The OSCE declared on 20 March 2006 that the "presidential election failed to meet OSCE commitments for democratic elections." Lukashenko "permitted State authority to be used in a manner which did not allow citizens to freely and fairly express their will at the ballot box... a pattern of intimidation and the suppression of independent voices... was evident throughout the campaign." The heads of all 25 EU countries declared that the election was "fundamentally flawed". Lukashenko later stated that he had rigged the election results, but against himself, in order to obtain a majority more typical of European countries. Although he had won 93.5% of the vote, he said, he had directed the government to announce a result of 86%. Some Russian nationalists, such as
Dmitry Rogozin and the
Movement Against Illegal Immigration, stated that they would like to see Lukashenko become
President of Russia in 2008. Lukashenko responded that he would not run for the Russian presidency, but that if his health was still good, he might run for reelection in 2011. In September 2008,
parliamentary elections were held. Lukashenko had allowed some opposition candidates to stand, though in the official results, opposition members failed to get any of the 110 available seats. OSCE observers described the vote as "flawed", including "several cases of deliberate falsification of results". According to the
Nizhny Novgorod-based
CIS election observation mission, the findings of which are often dismissed by the West, the elections in Belarus conformed to international standards. Lukashenko later commented that the opposition in Belarus was financed by foreign countries and was not needed. In April 2009, he held talks with
Pope Benedict XVI in the Vatican, Lukashenko's first visit to Western Europe after a travel ban on him a decade earlier. In August 2009, during a working trip to the
Vitebsk Region, Lukashenko announced a program for the revival of Belarusian potato production, saying: "We will finish working on a special program, we will decide how many potatoes we need for the domestic market, how many potatoes we can sell" and that "we'll bring back this crop that is very valuable to us". Later, Lukashenko received the nickname "potato
führer" from his detractors.
Fourth term (2010–2015) at the Russian-Belarusian strategic military exercises in 2013 Lukashenko was one of ten candidates registered for the presidential election held in Belarus on 19 December 2010. Though originally envisaged for 2011, an earlier date was approved "to ensure the maximum participation of citizens in the electoral campaign and to set the most convenient time for the voters." The run-up to the campaign was marked by a series of Russian media attacks on Lukashenko. The Central Election Committee said that all nine opposition figures were likely to receive less than half the vote total that Lukashenko would receive. and that "dirty tricks" were being played, the election was seen as comparatively open as a result of the desire to improve relations with both Europe and the US. On election day, two presidential candidates were seriously beaten by police in different opposition rallies. On the night of the election, opposition protesters chanting "Out!", "Long live Belarus!" and other similar slogans attempted to storm the building of the government of Belarus, smashing windows and doors before riot police were able to push them back. The number of protesters was reported by major news media as being around or above 10,000 people. At least seven of the opposition presidential candidates were arrested.
Alexander Otroschenkov,
Ales Michalevic,
Mikola Statkevich, and
Uladzimir Nyaklyayew. Sannikov's wife, journalist
Irina Khalip, was put under house arrest.
Yaraslau Ramanchuk's party leader, Anatoly Lebedko, was also arrested. summit, 11–12 February 2015 The CEC said that Lukashenko won 79.65% of the vote (he gained 5,130,557 votes) with 90.65% of the electorate voting. The OSCE categorised the elections as "flawed," while the
CIS mission observers approved the results as legitimate. However, the OSCE also stated that some improvements were made in the run-up to the election, including the candidates' use of television debates and the ability to deliver their messages unhindered. Several European foreign ministers issued a joint statement calling the election and its aftermath an "unfortunate step backwards in the development of democratic governance and respect for human rights in Belarus." EU ambassadors boycotted Lukashenko's inauguration ceremony of 22 January 2011, and only thirty-two foreign diplomats attended. Effective 31 January 2011, the EU renewed a travel ban, prohibiting Lukashenko and 156 of his associates from traveling to EU member countries, as a result of the crackdown on opposition supporters. Lukashenko was supportive of China's
Belt and Road Initiative global infrastructure development strategy, and the inception in 2012 of the associated low-tax
China–Belarus Industrial Park near
Minsk National Airport, planned to grow to by the 2060s.
Fifth term (2015–2020) in 2016|left leaders in Bishkek,
Kyrgyzstan, September 2016 On 11 October 2015, Lukashenko was elected for his fifth term as the president of Belarus. Just over three weeks later, he was
inaugurated in the
Independence Palace in the presence of attendees such as former
president of Ukraine Leonid Kuchma,
Chairman of the Russian Communist Party Gennady Zyuganov, and Belarusian
biathlete Darya Domracheva. In mid-September 2017, Lukashenko oversaw the advancement of joint Russian and Belarusian military relations during the military drills that were part of the
Zapad 2017 exercise. In August 2018, Lukashenko fired his prime minister,
Andrei Kobyakov, and several other officials due to a corruption scandal. Eventually,
Sergei Rumas was appointed to succeed him as prime minister. In April 2019, Lukashenko announced that the games were on budget and on time, and eventually, he opened the 2nd edition of the event on 21 June. Between 1–3 July 2019, he oversaw the country's celebrations of the 75th anniversary of the
Minsk Offensive, which culminated in an evening
military parade of the
Armed Forces of Belarus on the last day, which is the country's
Independence Day. shaking hands with Lukashenko in
Zhytomyr, October 2019In August 2019, Lukashenko met with former Kyrgyz president
Kurmanbek Bakiyev, who has lived in exile in Minsk since 2010, in the
Palace of Independence to mark Bakiyev's 70th birthday, which he had marked several days earlier. The meeting, which included the presentation of traditional flowers and symbolic gifts, angered the
Kyrgyz Foreign Ministry, which stated that the meeting "fundamentally does not meet the principles of friendship and cooperation between the two countries." In November 2019, Lukashenko visited the
Austrian capital,
Vienna, on a
state visit, which was his first in three years to an EU country. During the visit, he met with President
Alexander Van der Bellen, Chancellor
Brigitte Bierlein, and
National Council President Wolfgang Sobotka. He also paid his respects at the
Soviet War Memorial at the
Schwarzenbergplatz. During the course of the
COVID-19 pandemic, he undertook two working visits to
Russia, one of the few European leaders to undertake foreign visits during the pandemic. He also received Hungarian prime minister
Viktor Orbán during his
state visit to Minsk. Orbán called for an end to EU sanctions on Belarus during this visit. His first visit to Russia was to attend the rescheduled
Moscow Victory Day Parade on
Red Square together with his son.
Sixth term (2020–2025) On 9 August 2020, according to the preliminary count, Lukashenko was re-elected for his sixth term as the president of Belarus. US Secretary of State
Mike Pompeo warned that the election was "not free [or] fair".
Mass protests erupted across Belarus following the
2020 Belarusian presidential election, which was marred by allegations of widespread
electoral fraud. Subsequently, opposition presidential candidate
Sviatlana Tsikhanouskaya claimed she had received between 60 and 70% of the vote and formed a
Coordination Council to facilitate the peaceful and orderly transfer of power in Belarus. On 15 August 2020,
Lithuanian foreign minister Linas Linkevičius referred to Lukashenko as the "former president" of Belarus. It was reported that President Lukashenko's authorities asked
Kremlin representatives about the possibility of Lukashenko escaping to
Russia. Furthermore, it was reported that Russia admits that Lukashenko's resignation from the post of head of state is likely. On 17 August 2020, the members of the
European Parliament issued a joint statement which stated that they do not recognise Alexander Lukashenko as the president of Belarus, considering him to be
persona non grata in the
European Union. On 19 August, the member states of the
European Union agreed not to recognise the results and issued a statement saying "The 9 August elections were neither free nor fair, therefore we do not recognise the results." The governments of the
United States, On 23 August 2020, footage emerged showing Lukashenko at the Independence Palace in Minsk. In the first two videos, he is seen walking near a helicopter, wearing a bulletproof vest and holding an
AKS-74U assault rifle, and then walking around the palace grounds. In the latter footage, Lukashenko was heard to say, "Leave me alone," and "There is no one left there, right?" His 15-year-old son, Nikolai, was seen with him dressed in military uniform and holding a gun. In a third video, he is seen surveying protestors from a helicopter and is heard saying "How the rats ran away" in an apparent reference to the protesters. In a fourth video, Lukashenko was seen removing the former flag of Belarus from a flower bed, waving at security personnel, and, in reference to protesters, saying, "We will deal with them." On 30 August, the Independence Palace became again a scene of protests. When questioned about the whereabouts of Alexander Lukashenko on this day, his publicity team released an undated photograph of him walking around the grounds of the Independence Palace holding a gun. On 23 September 2020, Lukashenko was secretly inaugurated president for a sixth term in a ceremony at the Palace of Independence attended by an invited group of 700 guests. On 27 November 2020, Lukashenko announced that he would resign once Belarus' new constitution was adopted. In December, the executive board of the
International Olympic Committee (IOC) decided to exclude until further notice all members of the Belarusian Olympic Committee from all IOC events, specifically targeting Lukashenko who was elected as its chairman in 1997. On 17 April 2021, Russia's FSB security service exposed an alleged military coup and assassination attempt of Lukashenko. On 24 April 2021, Lukashenko announced that he would sign a decree to amend emergency transfer of power. "I will sign a decree about how the power in Belarus will be set up. If the President is shot the security council will get the power." Lukashenko is the head of the Security Council himself; however, his eldest son, Victor Lukashenko, is regarded as its informal leader. This move was seen to empower his son, to be in the perfect position to succeed him in the next elections. Under current law, the prime minister assumes the presidential powers if the presidency becomes vacant, but Lukashenko said that the prime minister will only become the nominal leader and all decisions would be taken by the 20-person security council, by secret ballot. i president
Ilham Aliyev in Baku, Azerbaijan, April 2021|left|227x227px On 5 May 2021, Belarusians in Germany filed a legal complaint against Lukashenko for 'state torture' and 'crimes against humanity.' If he enters Germany he risks trial or if convicted and enters Germany faces punishment given by court. Lukashenko responded that Germany was not in a position to criticise him, referring to the German Government as the "Heirs of Fascism". At the same time, he said that he will not resign, a reversal from his statement in November, but said he will call early presidential elections if and only if the United States does so as well. ,
Xi Jinping,
Modi, and other leaders at the
Shanghai Cooperation Organisation summit in Samarkand, September 2022 On 9 May 2021, Lukashenko signed the decree, announced on 24 April 2021, titled "On the Protection of sovereignty and constitutional order." The contingency decree states that in the event that the president is unable to perform his duties,
martial law will be immediately imposed and presidential power will be transferred to the
Security Council, which is widely believed to be made up of strong allies of Lukashenko. On 24 June 2023, Lukashenko said he had negotiated with
Yevgeny Prigozhin with the agreement of
Vladimir Putin in ending the
Wagner Group rebellion. Lukashenko told Wagner that he would be squashed like bugs if he tried to enter Belarus and warned that Putin would never agree to remove top generals, including Defense minister
Sergei Shoigu. He promised to accommodate Wagner's troops in Belarus. He claimed that Putin desired to destroy the Wagner Group after the mutiny, and he prevented Putin from carrying out the obliteration of the group. Lukashenko's rule in the crisis raised his clout internationally. On 25 March 2023, Putin announced plans to install
Russian tactical nuclear weapons in Belarus. On 27 September 2024, Lukashenko publicly warned that Belarus would use
nuclear weapons if attacked by the West.
Seventh term (2025–present) during the
Victory Day celebrations in Moscow on 9 May 2025 Lukashenko was re-elected in the 2025 Belarusian presidential election on 26 January, with official results showing that he had won around 88% of the vote. He was inaugurated for his seventh term as president on 25 March. In April 2025, after meeting with Pakistani Prime Minister
Shehbaz Sharif in Minsk, Lukashenko announced a plan to open Belarus to 150,000
migrant workers from Pakistan. Lukashenko's migration plans have raised concerns in neighboring Poland and among the Belarusian public. In August 2025, Lukashenko announced that he was "not planning" to seek another term at the
next election and also dismissed speculations of grooming his son,
Nikolai, to succeed him as president.
Domestic policy The political system of Lukashenko has become colloquially known as "Lukashism" or "Lukashenkoism".
John Sweeney summarised Lukashism as "a mutant version of the
Soviet Union's deal with its people: they pretend to pay us, and we pretend to work; we pretend to vote for him; he pretends that the vote is fair." Lukashenko promotes himself as a "
man of the people." Lukashenko wanted to rebuild Belarus when he took office; the economy was in free-fall due to declining industry and lack of demand for Belarusian goods. Lukashenko kept many industries under the control of the government. In 2001, he stated his intention to improve the
social welfare of his citizens and to make Belarus "powerful and prosperous." With the ascent to power of Lukashenko in 1994, the
Russification policy of Russian Imperial and Soviet era was renewed. In 2006, Lukashenko said that people who speak
Belarusian language cannot do anything, because nothing great can be expressed in Belarusian as the Belarusian language is a poor language and there are only two great languages in the world: Russian and English. Since the November 1996 referendum, Lukashenko has effectively held all governing power in the nation. Under the Constitution, if the House of Representatives rejects his choice for prime minister twice, he has the right to dissolve it. His decrees have greater weight than ordinary legislation. He also has near-absolute control over government spending; parliament can only increase or decrease spending with his permission. The unemployment rate for the country at the end of 2011 was at 0.6% of the population (of 6.86 million eligible workers), a decrease from 1995, when unemployment was 2.9% with a working-eligible population of 5.24 million. The per-capita
gross national income rose from in 1993 to at the end of 2011. One major economic issue Lukashenko faced throughout his presidency was the value of the Belarusian ruble. For a time it was
pegged to major foreign currencies, such as the
euro,
US dollar and the
Russian ruble in order to maintain the stability of the Belarusian ruble. Yet, the currency has experienced several periods of
devaluation. A major devaluation took place in 2011 after the government announced that average salaries would increase to . The 2011 devaluation was the largest on record for the past twenty years according to the World Bank. Belarus also had to seek a bailout from international sources and, although it has received loans from China, loans from the IMF and other agencies depend on how Belarus reforms its economy. Some critics of Lukashenko, including the opposition group
Zubr, use the term
Lukashism to refer to the
political and
economic system Lukashenko has implemented in Belarus. The term is also used more broadly to refer to an authoritarian ideology based on a
cult of personality and nostalgia for Soviet times among certain groups in Belarus. The
US Congress sought to aid the opposition groups by passing the
Belarus Democracy Act of 2004 to introduce sanctions against Lukashenko's government and provide financial and other support to the opposition. Lukashenko supporters argue that his rule spared Belarus the turmoil that beset many other former Soviet countries. Lukashenko commented on the criticism of him by saying: "I've been hearing these accusations for over 10 years and we have got used to it. We are not going to answer them. I want to come from the premise that the elections in Belarus are held for ourselves. I am sure that it is the Belarusian people who are the masters in our state."
Global Finance magazine listed Belarus as the 115th poorest country in the world in 2024.
COVID-19 pandemic During the COVID-19 pandemic, Lukashenko stated that concerns about the pandemic were a "frenzy and a psychosis" and that working the tractors, drinking vodka and going to saunas could prevent people from infection from the virus. "People are working in tractors. No one is talking about the virus", Lukashenko said on 16 March 2020. "There, the tractor will heal everyone. The fields heal everyone". He also said: "I don't drink, but recently I've been saying that people should not only wash their hands with vodka, but also poison the virus with it. You should drink the equivalent of 40–50 milliliters of rectified spirit daily", but he advised against doing so while at work. Lukashenko described these comments as a joke. By early May, Belarus was reported to have 15,000 diagnosed cases, one of the highest per capita rates of infection in Eastern Europe. On 28 July 2020, Lukashenko announced he had asymptomatic COVID-19. Neither the Presidential Administration nor the country's health service have commented on this statement. On 12 August 2021, Lukashenko stated that he is strongly opposed to making vaccination mandatory. "There will be no mandatory vaccination in Belarus. I am strongly against it. Vaccination will remain voluntary. If a person wants to be vaccinated it is good, if not, let it be".
Political repression Torture, sexual abuse and other forms of repression On 1 September 2020, the
Office of the United Nations High Commissioner for Human Rights (OHCHR) declared that its experts received reports of 450 documented cases of torture and ill-treatment of people who were arrested during the
protests following the presidential election. The experts also received reports of violence against women and children, including sexual abuse and rape with rubber batons. According to the OHCHR, both male and female detainees were subjected to rape and other forms of sexual and gender-based violence. Medical records reviewed by OHCHR indicate lesions and other injuries to the male genitalia associated with forcible twisting and rape.
Psychological violence, including threats of rape, was also used against detainees. At least three detainees suffered injuries indicative of
sexual violence in
Okrestino prison in Minsk or on the way there. The victims were hospitalised with intramuscular bleeding of the rectum, anal fissure and bleeding, and damage to the mucous membrane of the rectum. In an interview from September 2020 Lukashenko claimed that detainees faked their bruises, saying, "Some of the girls there had their butts painted in blue". In November 2021, however, Lukashenko confirmed in an interview to the
BBC that people were beaten in Okrestino, saying: "OK, OK, I admit it, I admit it. People were beaten in the
Okrestina Detention Centre. But there were
police beaten up too and you didn't show this." In January 2021, an audio recording was released in which the commander of internal troops and deputy interior minister of Belarus
Mikalai Karpiankou tells security forces that they can cripple, maim and kill protesters in order to make them understand their actions. This, he says, is justified because anyone who takes to the streets is participating in a kind of guerrilla warfare. In addition, he discussed the establishment of camps, surrounded by barbed wire, where protesters will be detained until the situation calms down. A spokeswoman for the
Interior Ministry stamped the audio file as a fake. However, a phonoscopic examination of the audio recording confirmed that the voice on the recording belongs to Karpiankou. The
Organization for Security and Cooperation in Europe expressed its concern about the remarks. According to
Radio Free Europe/Radio Liberty, such a camp was indeed used near the town of
Slutsk in the days from 13 to 15 August 2020. Many of those detained there are said to have been brought from the Okrestina prison in Minsk. In March 2023, Lukashenko signed a law which allows to use
capital punishment against officials and soldiers convicted of high
treason.
Forced disappearances in 2004, raising awareness about the disappearances of opposition activists in Belarus In 1999 opposition leaders
Yury Zacharanka and
Viktar Hanchar together with his business associate
Anatol Krasouski disappeared. Hanchar and Krasouski disappeared the same day of a broadcast on state television in which President Alexander Lukashenko ordered the chiefs of his security services to crack down on "opposition scum." Although the
State Security Committee of the Republic of Belarus (KGB) had them under constant surveillance, the official investigation announced that the case could not be solved. The investigation of the disappearance of journalist
Dzmitry Zavadski in 2000 has also yielded no results. Copies of a report by the Parliamentary Assembly of the Council of Europe, which linked senior Belarusian officials to the cases of disappearances, were confiscated. In September 2004, the European Union and the United States issued travel bans for five Belarusian officials suspected in being involved in the kidnapping of Zacharanka: Interior Affairs Minister
Vladimir Naumov, Prosecutor General
Viktor Sheiman, Minister for Sports and Tourism Yuri Sivakov, and Colonel
Dmitri Pavlichenko from the Belarus Interior Ministry. In December 2019,
Deutsche Welle published a documentary film in which Yury Garavski, a former member of a special unit of the
Belarusian Ministry of Internal Affairs, confirmed that it was his unit which had arrested, taken away and murdered Zecharanka and that they later did the same with Viktar Hanchar and Anatol Krassouski.
Assassination plans on dissidents abroad On 4 January 2021, the
EU Observer reported that new evidence, including documents and audio recordings, provide that Belarusian secret services planned to murder dissidents abroad. An audio file, allegedly being a recording from a bugged meeting in 2012, reveals
Vadim Zaitsev, the
KGB chairman at the time, discussing the murder plot with two officers from the KGB's
Alpha Group, an elite counter-terrorism unit. Translated from Russian, one of the voices in the recording says, "We should be working with
Sheremet, who is a massive pain in the arse [inaudible]. We'll plant [a bomb] and so on and this fucking rat will be taken down in fucking pieces, legs in one direction, arms in the other direction. If everything [looks like] natural causes, it won't get into people's minds the same way." The flight was forced to land at
Minsk International Airport shortly before it reached the Lithuanian border after Belarusian air traffic control conveyed a report of explosives on board the plane. The flight was escorted by a
Belarusian Air Force MiG-29 fighter jet. Belarusian authorities said no explosives were found and arrested Protasevich, who was placed in a list of "individuals involved in terrorist activity" the previous year for his role in the anti-government protests and incitement to
public disorder. The move was condemned by opposition figures, with Tsikhanouskaya saying that Protasevich "faces the death penalty" in Belarus.
Foreign policy Russia during a news conference in 2002 In the 1990s, Lukashenko and the then-Russian president Boris Yeltsin envisaged the formation of a Union State. Yeltsin suffered from poor health and alcoholism, which induced Lukashenko into thinking that he would lead both states. But after Yeltsin anointed Putin as his successor, Lukashenko stalled the merger. Lukashenko called the media attack "dirty propaganda". in 2020 Despite a historically good relationship with Russia, tensions between Lukashenko and the Russian government started showing in 2020. On 24 January 2020, Lukashenko publicly accused Russian president Vladimir Putin of trying to make Belarus a part of Russia. In July 2020, the relationship between Belarus and Russia was described as "strained" after 33 Russian military contractors were arrested in Minsk. On 5 August 2020, Russia's security chief Dmitry Medvedev warned Belarus to release the contractors. (CSTO), in Moscow on 16 May 2022 On 11 November 2021, Lukashenko raised the possibility of interrupting the
Yamal–Europe pipeline carrying
Russian gas to the European Union if the bloc imposes further sanctions on Belarus.
Putin said that Lukashenko had not consulted him before raising the possibility of stopping gas deliveries coming from Russia to the EU via a pipeline through Belarus, adding that such a move would risk harming ties between Belarus and Russia. In February 2022, Lukashenko permitted Russian forces to stage part of the invasion of Ukraine from Belarusian territory. Commenting on the war in Ukraine Lukashenko has said that he didn't expect the conflict “drag on this way.” In June 2023, Lukashenko claimed that "the only mistake we made’ was not finishing off Ukraine with Russia in 2014". In August 2024, Lukashenko urged both Russia and Ukraine to start
peace negotiations, saying in an interview with Russian state television: "Neither the Ukrainian people, nor the Russians, nor the Belarusians need it. It’s them in the West, who need [the war]." He accused the West of supporting Ukraine's
incursion into the Kursk region.
European Union Lukashenko's relationship with the EU has been strained, in part by choice and in part by his policies towards domestic opponents. Lukashenko's repression of opponents caused him to be called "Europe's last dictator" and resulted in the EU imposing visa sanctions on him and a range of Belarusian officials. At times, the EU has lifted sanctions as a way to encourage dialogue or gain concessions from Lukashenko. Since the EU adopted this policy of "change through engagement", it has supported economic and political reforms to help integrate the Belarusian state. After the EU sanctioned Belarus for its crackdown against the 2020 mass protests, Lukashenko advertised Belarus as an entry point for migrants to reach the EU, resulting in the
Belarus–European Union border crisis.
United States in 2020 In March 2003, Lukashenko said that Belarus unanimously condemned the US-led
Iraq War. On 29 August 2019,
John Bolton, then
National Security Advisor of the United States, was received by Lukashenko during his visit to Minsk, which was the first of its kind in 18 years.
China in 2023 Under Lukashenko, China and Belarus have maintained close ties, with him advocating an approach of "understanding China, learning from China, and approaching China." In 2012, the
chairman of the Standing Committee of the National People's Congress Wu Bangguo noted that Belarus has been rapidly developing under Lukashenko. On 1 March 2023, Lukashenko met Chinese leader Xi Jinping in Beijing, which produced a range of cooperation documents on industry, trade, agricultural, and other matters.
Middle East Following the
2014 Syrian presidential election, President Lukashenko congratulated President
Bashar al-Assad. His cable "expressed keenness to strengthen and develop bilateral relations between Belarus and Syria in all fields for the benefit of the two peoples." Belarus condemned the
NATO-led
military intervention in Libya, and the foreign ministry stated that "the missile strikes and bombings on the territory of Libya go beyond Resolution 1973 of the UN Security Council and are in breach of its principal goal, ensuring safety of the civilian population. The Republic of Belarus calls on the states involved with the military operation to cease, with immediate effect, the military operations which lead to human casualties. The settlement of the conflict is an internal affair of Libya and should be carried out by the Libyan people alone without military intervention from outside." They did not recognise the
National Transitional Council. Upon hearing the news regarding the death of Libyan leader
Muammar Gaddafi, Alexander Lukashenko said that "aggression has been committed, and the country's leadership, not only Muammar Gaddafi, has been killed. And how was it killed? Well, if they had shot him in a battle, it's one thing, but they humiliated and tormented him, they shot at him, they violated him when he was wounded, they twisted his neck and arms, and then they tortured him to death. It's worse than the Nazis once did." He also condemned the current situation of Libya and was critical regarding the future of the country.
Others His policies have been praised by some other world leaders. In response to a question about Belarus's domestic policies, President
Hugo Chávez of Venezuela said "We see here a model social state like the one we are beginning to create." In 2015, Lukashenko sought to improve trade relations between Belarus and Latin America. In March 2022, Australia sanctioned Lukashenko for giving "
strategic support to Russia and its military forces" in the
Russian invasion of Ukraine. Also in 2022, he was blacklisted by New Zealand and Japan on the same grounds. In February 2026, Ukraine joined the sanctions against Alexander Lukashenko. In September 2023, Lukashenko, reacting to the
2023 North Korea–Russia summit, proposed a three-way cooperation pact with Russia and
North Korea. At the December 2024 summit of the
Eurasian Economic Union, Armenian prime minister
Nikol Pashinyan engaged in a heated argument with Lukashenko during a livestream attended by other EEU leaders after Pashinyan refused Lukashenko's invitation to visit Belarus for the next EEU summit, citing Minsk's support for Azerbaijan. In March 2026, Lukashenko visited North Korea, marking his first state visit to North Korea, as well as the first visit to the country by a Belarusian President. He was greeted by North Korean Vice Premier
Kim Tok-hun at the
Pyongyang International Airport. Lukashenko visited the
Kumsusan Palace of the Sun, where he laid flowers at the resting place of former leaders Kim Il Sung and
Kim Jong Il. He then met with North Korean leader
Kim Jong Un, and took part in a ceremony at
Kim Il Sung Square. During the meeting, the two sides signed a friendship and cooperation treaty. ==Public life==