Project

Belarus: A Soviet Hangover

Twenty years have passed since the Soviet Union collapsed, and Belarus still hasn’t gotten the message. The Kansas-sized country on Russia’s western border remains a Soviet-style dictatorship: Elections are rigged, the media is muzzled and opposition figures are routinely jailed, beaten or worse. State control is total.

That Belarus now stands in such sharp contrast with its formerly communist European neighbors is a testament to the will of its president, Aleksandr Lukashenko, a former collective farm manager who deals in the politics of fear. Since he became president in 1994, Lukashenko has relied on cheap Russian gas and oil subsidies to expand the power and profits of his hermetic regime—at the expense of political reform and human rights.

Yet there are legacies of the Soviet period that preceded him, none more deeply felt than the Chernobyl nuclear disaster in Ukraine. Often overlooked is the fact that most of the toxic fallout drifted into Belarus, with grim long-term consequences. And whereas Ukraine has opened up its borders and learned to manage the disaster’s fallout with outside help, the gloom in Belarus has never lifted.

Today, the country’s social and political woes are compounded by a gathering economic crisis that has everyone on edge. Massive inflation and restrictions on basic goods are testing the commitment of even Lukashenko’s ardent supporters, who have traded democracy for stability. A rising number of protesters are taking to the street, including an irreverent new generation that is using social media tools to organize and express themselves.

With pressures building and no clear solution in sight, these small cracks in the system are poised to widen. Jason Motlagh travels to Belarus for a closer look at the intersection of past and present in a place that is little known to the outside world, and hard to access from within.

Belarus in the Time of Lukashenko

In Belarus, city streets are filled with fear and resignation despite the recent wave of pro-democracy protests. Across the countryside, Soviet-style agricultural and industrial systems are not the source stability they once were. Poverty and joblessness are on the rise. A gloom hangs over Europe’s last dictatorship.

Searching for Banksy in Belarus

Belarussian artists and intellectuals have found a place in Minsk where they can express themselves, but still feel they are being monitored closely by the KGB.

In Belarus, Clapping Can Be Subversive

As the rallies in Belarus grow each week, the government has begun to crack down. But protesters are not deterred and have started making homemade DVDs of police brutalities.