Belarus
security officials say they are still waiting for the results of an inquiry
into an incident involving an aircraft that entered Belarus airspace via
Lithuania on July 4th and scattered hundreds of stuffed bears bearing messages.
"There
have been no changes so far in terms of receiving any new information from
Lithuania about the investigation of this matter," KGB spokesman Alexander
Antonovich told Interfax on Wednesday.
Relations
between Minsk and Stockholm deteriorated after the incident, when a light
aircraft crossed into Belarus and dropped hundreds of teddy-bears.
The toys
carried slogans urging Minsk to show more respect for freedom of speech and
democracy.
The
plane, which had been chartered by a Swedish PR firm, evaded Belarus air
defenses after making their drop over the capital of Minsk.
The
incident represented a major embarrassment for President Alexander Lukashenko
and led to dismissals at the top of the country’s Air Force and State Border
Guard.
Early
last month, Belarus' Office of the Prosecutor General asked Lithuania and
Sweden to help investigate the incident, Antonovich said.
The
chairman of the security and defense committee of the Lithuanian Parliament,
Arvydas Anusauskas, said Lithuania was investigating the incident and would
produce its findings before the end of September.
Minsk
invited the three Swedes who organized the flight to Belarus for an interview
with investigators. The men flatly refused.
If the
perpetrators of this incident hoped they would make a difference in Belarus’s
parliamentary elections, they were mistaken.
Lukashenko
on Sunday received an overwhelming show of support in parliamentary elections
as an absolute majority of candidates loyal to his policies won seats in the
National Assembly.
Alexander
Lukashenko has served as President of Belarus since 1994.
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