The Belarusian president says there’s nothing wrong with prosecuting someone who is guilty, but laments the West’s hypocrisy
The French authorities were right to arrest Telegram CEO Pavel Durov if they have legitimate concerns over the legality of his activities, Belarusian President Alexander Lukashenko has said. He noted, however, that when similar steps are taken by Belarus or other non-Western countries, they are often condemned as human rights violations.
Durov was detained in France last weekend as part of a broader cybercrime probe into his end-to-end encrypted social media platform. On Monday, France revealed a list of preliminary charges, accusing him of “facilitating” alleged illicit activities on his platform, including drug dealing, money laundering, and child pornography, by refusing to cooperate with French investigators.
Speaking at a national education summit on Tuesday, Lukashenko used Durov’s arrest in France as an example of Western hypocrisy.
Read more
“We saw how France… and I do not blame them – they are doing the right thing. Durov or not Durov, if you are guilty, you should be made to answer,” the Belarusian leader stated. Directing his words to Western nations, he asked, “why should you make claims against us [Belarus] when we defend ourselves using the same methods as you do?”
Many in the West have called Lukashenko a dictator and criticized his policies, especially with regard to political prisoners. In his speech, he recalled that French President Emmanuel Macron denounced him after the 2020 election in Belarus, which ended with the arrests of several opposition politicians. He noted that Macron’s criticism came at a time when France was dealing with the Yellow Vests protest movement and their standoffs with the authorities.
“Remember, they were killing there, not looking at whether a woman or a man was in front of them… And [Macron] says, but we have democracy, we can do this. And [Lukashenko] has a dictatorship there.