While it’s impossible to know how many votes Tsikhanouskaya received amid the rampant ballot box stuffing, protests erupted across the country when a sixth landslide for Lukashenko was announced. Threatened by the local KGB with years in jail and having her young children become wards of the state, Tsikhanouskaya was effectively forced into exile in Lithuania, from where she heads the Coordination Council of Belarus, a government in exile.
Her shadow government’s proposal to issue a New Belarus passport for the tens of thousands of Belarusians who fled the country after protesting the stolen elections was given a new urgency following Minsk’s announcement that Belarusian consulates would no longer renew passports abroad, leaving many citizens to make the stark choice between being left with no valid documents or returning home and risking harsh jail sentences for their role in the protests.
NGE: What does Alexander Lukashenko’s decree ending the renewal of passports by Belarusian consulates abroad mean for the New Belarus passport?
ST: We began working on the Belarus passport a year ago … It was meant as a symbolic document. But Lukashenko played into our hands to some extent, because recognising this document has become a matter of urgency and so it’s a good thing that we had already prepared for it.