A High-Stakes Standoff in Belarus

Published: Sept. 2, 2020, 9:55 a.m.

b'Aleksandr Lukashenko came to office in Belarus in the 1990s on a nostalgic message, promising to undo moves toward a market economy and end the hardship the country had endured after gaining independence from the Soviet Union. As president, he acquired dictatorial powers, removing term limits, cracking down on opposition and stifling the press.\\n\\nIn recent years, however, economic stagnation has bred growing discontent. And when Mr. Lukashenko claimed an implausible landslide victory in a presidential election last month, he found himself facing mass protests that have only grown as he has attempted to crush them.\\n\\nToday, we chart Mr. Lukashenko\\u2019s rise to power and examine his fight to hold on to it.\\xa0\\n\\nGuest: Ivan Nechepurenko, a reporter with the Moscow bureau of The New York Times.\\xa0\\n\\nFor more information on today\\u2019s episode, visit nytimes.com/thedaily\\xa0\\n\\nBackground reading:\\xa0The protests in Belarus present the greatest challenge yet to Mr. Lukashenko\\u2019s hold on power. Formerly apolitical people have taken to the streets against him.Svetlana Tikhanovskaya, the opposition candidate who has galvanized the movement against Mr. Lukashenko, is a newcomer to politics who took up the role when more established figures were jailed or exiled.'