Tuesday

16th Apr 2024

EU declines to retaliate against Belarus

EU countries have opted not to retaliate against Belarus in its diplomatic war on Sweden.

They will instead tell Belarus' own envoys to EU capitals that the Union is not happy. They might also add more Belarusian officials and businessmen to the EU sanctions list in autumn.

Read and decide

Join EUobserver today

Get the EU news that really matters

Instant access to all articles — and 20 years of archives. 14-day free trial.

... or subscribe as a group

  • Lukashenko flew off the handle about the teddy bears on national TV on Thursday (Photo: Presidencia de la Republica del Ecuador)

"There is going to be a very clear message to all Belarusian ambassadors around Europe in the next few days expressing full solidarity with the Swedes on this," Olof Skoog, the Swedish-origin chairman of the Political and Security Committee (PSC), a high-level EU diplomatic forum, said after meeting EU ambasadors in Brussels on Friday (10 August).

"We will be reviewing sanctions on Belarus later on in the next few months ... the situation with the Swedish embassy will have an effect on this," he added.

Skoog convened the PSC after Belarus earlier this week expelled all of Sweden's diplomats from Minsk. Sweden also threw out three Belarusian diplomats in the dispute.

Some EU diplomats had expected EU states to pull out all of their envoys from Minsk in solidarity with Sweden.

EU envoys already quit Minsk once this year in February when President Alexander Lukashenko expelled the EU and Polish ambassadors.

One diplomatic source told this website this would "limit contacts before the Belarus elections [in September], which isn't a good option," however.

He said Russia's effort to pull Belarus into the Eurasian Union, a quasi-EU club of former Soviet states, also makes it a bad time for the West to push away Lukashenko.

He noted that Lukashenko expelled the Swedes because they were among the most active EU countries in supporting dissidents.

He added that the teddy bear stunt, in which a Swedish advertising firm air-dropped bears with pro-free-speech slogans into Belarus last month, was "the last straw" for the irritable dictator.

Latest News

  1. New EU envoy Markus Pieper quits before taking up post
  2. EU puts Sudan war and famine-risk back in spotlight
  3. EU to blacklist Israeli settlers, after new sanctions on Hamas
  4. Private fears of fairtrade activist for EU election campaign
  5. Brussels venue ditches far-right conference after public pressure
  6. How German police pulled the plug on a Gaza conference
  7. EU special summit, MEPs prep work, social agenda This WEEK
  8. EU leaders condemn Iran, urge Israeli restraint

Stakeholders' Highlights

  1. Nordic Council of MinistersJoin the Nordic Food Systems Takeover at COP28
  2. Nordic Council of MinistersHow women and men are affected differently by climate policy
  3. Nordic Council of MinistersArtist Jessie Kleemann at Nordic pavilion during UN climate summit COP28
  4. Nordic Council of MinistersCOP28: Gathering Nordic and global experts to put food and health on the agenda
  5. Friedrich Naumann FoundationPoems of Liberty – Call for Submission “Human Rights in Inhume War”: 250€ honorary fee for selected poems
  6. World BankWorld Bank report: How to create a future where the rewards of technology benefit all levels of society?

Join EUobserver

EU news that matters

Join us