The
West generally denounced the election as fraudulent; the
European Union renewed a
travel ban effective 31 January 2011 – prohibiting Lukashenko and 156 of his associates from traveling to EU member countries – as a result of violent crackdowns of opposition supporters by Lukashenko's government forces following the election. The United States pledged to increase assistance to civil society by 30%, to $15 million; Germany, €6.6 million; Sweden, €7.0 million; the EU, $21.5 million; and Poland, $14 million, with total aid reaching $120 million. The United States expanded its sanctions list on January 31 and again on August 11. The EU reintroduced travel restrictions, which had been suspended in 2008, on 31 January 2011, covering 157 people in total. The list was gradually expanded, reaching 243 individuals and 32 companies by 26 April 2012. Lukashenko's inauguration ceremony of 22 January 2011 was boycotted by European Union ambassadors, During this ceremony Lukashenko defended the legitimacy of his re-election and vowed that Belarus would never have its own version of the 2004
Ukrainian Orange Revolution and
Georgia's 2003
Rose Revolution. In January, Lukashenko ordered the OSCE to leave. ;Domestic • – Lukashenko called the percentage of voters who voted for him "quite good". According to Lukashenko his opponents got few votes because "the ex-candidates had not committed any deeds to convince the Belarusian nation to vote for them. People learned their names two months before". ;International organisations • – The
Secretary-General of the United Nations Ban Ki-moon noted the serious concerns voiced by observer groups regarding the electoral process and post-electoral developments and called on the government to observe fully human rights and due process. He also called on Belarusian president Aleksandr Lukashenko to release political prisoners arrested following the elections. • – The
EU High Representative Catherine Ashton said in an official statement that "unfortunately, the trend set by the relative progress during the campaigning period was not followed by a transparent and fair polling process. It is especially regrettable that election night was marred by violence, which I strongly condemn. In particular, the beating and detention of several opposition leaders, including presidential candidates, is unacceptable." The
president of the European Parliament Jerzy Buzek added that "beating independent election candidates is unacceptable. The action was outrageous"; he also launched a
European Parliamentary investigation into the election. • A joint statement from the foreign ministers of the
Czech Republic (
Karel Schwarzenberg),
Germany (
Guido Westerwelle),
Poland (
Radosław Sikorski) and
Sweden (
Carl Bildt) on 23 December declared that "there can be no business-as-usual between the European Union and Belarus’ president, Aleksandr Lukashenko, after what has happened since the presidential election in Belarus[.] [...] continued positive engagement with Mr. Lukashenko at the moment seems to be a waste of time and money. He has made his choice — and it is a choice against everything the European Union stands for." They added that "while the voting proceeded in an orderly fashion, the counting of the votes turned into a charade. The report of the independent observers assessed the counting as 'bad' or 'very bad' in nearly half the polling stations they could observe, and it is not unreasonable to assume that it was even worse in the others. It became obvious that there were orders not to count votes, but to deliver a predetermined result. The combination of vote-rigging and outright repression makes what
Milosevic tried to do
in Serbia in 2000 pale in comparison. What we have seen brings back memories of
the introduction of martial law in Poland in 1981." •
OSCE – The
Organization for Security and Co-operation in Europe called the election "flawed" and that Belarus has a "considerable way to go in meeting its OSCE commitments." In response, Lukashenko said the OSCE had no right to speak about events in Belarus which happened after the election. ;Expressions of congratulations • –
President Ilham Aliyev congratulated Lukashenko. The
chairman of the Kazakh Senate,
Kassym-Jomart Tokayev, also said that "the people of Belarus voted for the incumbent president, and this choice will enjoy the respect of Kazakhstan." • –
Russian president Dmitry Medvedev commented on December 20 that the Belarusian election was an internal matter He officially congratulated Lukashenko on December 25. Russian electoral observers also said the election was legitimate. • –
President Bashar al-Assad congratulated Lukashenko. The
Foreign Ministry stated that it would take into account the views of international observers in formulating its opinion about the election and expressed concern about the use of violence against opposition demonstrators. One Ukrainian member of the OSCE election observation mission,
parliament deputy of the
Party of Regions Oleksandr Stoyan, stated he saw no violations during the election and hoped that the Party of Regions would welcome the election result. • –
President Nguyễn Minh Triết congratulated Lukashenko on his victory. ;Expressions of concerns • –
Foreign Minister Radosław Sikorski stated that a "reliable source" had informed him that the official results of the election had been falsified. • – On the night of the election, the
Swedish Minister for Foreign Affairs Carl Bildt reacted sharply about the news of a crackdown on the opposition rally in Minsk and said that the beating of Nyaklyayew "is very disturbing and totally unacceptable." • – The
United States did not recognise the result as legitimate and called for the immediate release of all opposition presidential candidates arrested by authorities. • In a joint statement on 24 December 2010,
US Secretary of State Hillary Clinton and the
EU's Catherine Ashton called for the immediate release of all 600 detained demonstrators as well as all presidential candidates. Both the EU and the US backed the OSCE's report asking Belarusian authorities to complete the reform of the electoral process it demanded. They said that without "considerable progress" in respect to democracy and human rights relations between Belarus and the EU and the US would not improve: "The Government of Belarus should take the steps necessary to create political space for political activists, civil society representatives, and independent journalists. The elections and their aftermath represent an unfortunate step backwards in the development of democratic governance and respect for
human rights in Belarus. The people of Belarus deserve better." • On March 17, 2011, the
United States Senate unanimously passed a resolution condemning the election as illegitimate and fraudulent; and calling on the Belarus regime to immediately release all
political prisoners captured during the peaceful election protests. ==New government==