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EU to let Belarus leader travel | EU to let Belarus leader travel |
(30 minutes later) | |
The European Union has decided to lift its travel ban on President Alexander Lukashenko of Belarus, in an attempt to encourage democratic reform. | |
The ban on Mr Lukashenko and other officials would be lifted for six months, a diplomat told Reuters. | |
Belarus has been labelled "Europe's last dictatorship" by the US - but the West has been encouraged by the release of political prisoners. | |
"We want to show that progress is being rewarded," said an EU commissioner. | |
External Relations Commissioner Benita Ferrero-Waldner said the EU should not "forego a possibility to have political leverage". | |
She was speaking after meeting Belarussian Foreign Minister Sergei Martynov - the EU's first high-level contact with the country in four years. | |
Only a few Belarussian officials, deemed responsible for disappearances in the country in 1999-2000, remain affected by the travel ban, the EU presidency said. | |
However, freezes on the assets of Belarussian officials in Europe would remain in place, diplomats said. | |
Russian rivalry | |
Not all European countries were convinced sanctions on Belarus should be eased. | |
Sweden's Foreign Minister Carl Bildt said that last month's parliamentary election, in which all the seats were won by politicians loyal to the president, was as "lousy" as usual in Belarus. | |
But the EU feels it has little option but to strengthen ties with its eastern neighbours - over which Russia is trying to reassert its influence - even when they do not entirely live up to democratic expectations, says the BBC's European affairs correspondent Oana Lungescu. |