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EU ministers begin talks on fresh Belarus sanctions

May 27, 2021

Germany says EU foreign ministers won't be satisifed with "small steps" as they put together plans for economic and sector-specific sanctions.

https://p.dw.com/p/3u1ne
German Foreign Minister Heiko Maas is wearing a branded EU face mask and talking to Ivan Korcok, Foreign Minister of Slovakia, 2 f l , Alexander Schallenberg, Foreign Minister of Austria, 2 f r and Gordon Grlic Radman, Foreign Minister of Croatia, R
EU foreign ministers are discussing further sanctions for Belarus during informal talks in LisbonImage: Janine Schmitz/photothek/imago images

European Union foreign ministers are discussing a new round of economic and sector-specific sanctions for Belarus, during informal talks on Thursday in the Portuguese city of Lisbon.

This comes just days after EU leaders agreed to impose serious aviation restrictions, in response to a forced landing of a passenger plane by Belarus authorities.

EU foreign policy chief Josep Borrell decried "the hijacking of the plane and the detention of the two passengers" as "completely unacceptable" shortly ahead of the meeting.

He tweeted he was looking forward to discussions.

What might the new sanctions be?

Borrell said that the EU foreign ministers would be discussing sanctions against specific people connected to the Belarusian regime.

German Foreign Minister Heiko Maas said that he expected to see significant sanctions. If Belarusian President Alexander Lukashenko does not make concessions, "one must assume that this will be just the beginning of a large and long spiral of sanctions," Maas said ahead of the meeting.

He described Lukashenko's behavior as "so unacceptable" that the EU would not be satisfied with smaller sanctions steps.

Instead, the goal is "that we want to impose sanctions on the economic structure and on financial transactions in Belarus quite significantly so that it also has an impact."

As they headed into the meeting, Baltic state ministers from Estonia and Lithuania speculated about possible sectors that the EU could target with sanctions.

Lithuania Foreign Minister Gabrielius Landsbergis told reporters: "We could talk about [sanctions on] the oil production sector."

Meanwhile, Estonian Foreign Minister Eva-Maria Liimets told reporters that she was hoping to discuss sanctions on "the companies which are close to the Belarusian regime."

Sector-specific sanctions could 'really hurt' Belarus

DW's Senior European Correspondent Bernd Riegert explained that despite the far-reaching sanctions on flights, these were "not the biggest measures" that the EU will take against Belarus.

Lukashenko orders kidnapping: Is Putin pulling the strings?

He said that the "sectoral sanctions" being discussed on Thursday could "really hurt Belarus." He suggested the EU could target the country's wood or cement industry.

Yet he stressed that "the EU is not there yet," adding that "not all foreign ministers are sure this is the right path."

What's the row with Belarus?

On Sunday, authorities in Belarus forced a Ryanair plane to land in the capital, Minsk, citing a bomb threat.

They scrambled a fighter jet to ensure that the passenger plane, which was flying from Athens in Greece to Vilnius in Lithuania, would land.

Authorities arrested 26-year-old Raman Pratasevich, an exiled Belarusian dissident and blogger in Belarus, who was onboard. He had left the country in 2019, shortly before pro-democracy protests swept the country, which  has been dubbed "Europe's last dictatorship."

A woman holds a poster reads "where is Raman Pratasevich?!" as she waits to see passengers of the Ryanair plane with registration number SP-RSM
People in Lithuania and across Europe were shocked about the plane diversion by Belarus authorities on SundayImage: Mindaugas Kulbis/AP Photo/picture alliance

The EU said it "strongly condemns" the arrest and forced landing, adding that it endangered aviation safety.

They requested EU carriers to refrain from flying over Belarusian airspace.

EU leaders also decided to ban Belarusian carriers from flying over the bloc's airspace.

G7 is also considering sanctions

The EU is not the only group of countries considering sanctions on Belarus over the forced diversion. The Group of Seven (G7) wealthy economies — Canada, France, Germany, Italy, Japan, the United States and Britain  —  announced on Thursday in a statement: "We will enhance our efforts, including through further sanctions as appropriate, to promote accountability for the actions of the Belarusian authorities."

What else is on the agenda for EU foreign ministers?

Belarus is not the only topic being discussed by the EU's foreign ministers. They are also set to review it strategy in Africa. This comes days after Mali's interim president and prime minister resigned on Wednesday after being arrested in an "attempted coup."

 Several EU countries have troops in the country as part of efforts to shore up a deteriorating security situation in the Sahel region.

They will also talk about what the EU council termed "unresolved conflicts in the Eastern neighborhood" — likely also to mean Ukraine, in addition to Belarus.

In April, concern grew in Western Europe over the amassing of around 100,000 Russian troops along its border with Ukraine and in the Crimea, which Russia annexed in 2014.

Ministers are also set to tackle tensions in the Indo-Pacific region. There has been increasing tension in the contested South China sea region between the US and China.

kmm/rt (dpa, Reuters)