INTL President of Belarus orders fighter jet to intercept civilian aircraft to arrest opposition activist!

Melodi

Disaster Cat
Holy Unprintable Bat Man! Now, this guy is diverting civilian airliners with fighter jets to pull opposition leaders living in exile off of it! Ryanair is based in Ireland and is pretty much the "Southwest" Airlines of European budget flights. I can only imagine the terror of the passengers on the plane and the fate of the person pulled off it. I hope there is strong international condemnation of this, otherwise, flying just got even more concerning than it already is.

View: https://twitter.com/CNN/status/1396506667974529025

The President of Belarus ordered a fighter jet to intercept a Ryanair plane carrying an opposition activist, who was then arrested in Minsk



Belarus activist arrested after his plane makes emergency landing in Minsk
A leading Belarusian opposition activist in exile has been arrested in Belarus after his flight from Athens to Vilnius made an emergency landing in the capital city.
cnn.com
 

Melodi

Disaster Cat
A bit more information from Sky NewsRoman Protasevich: Ryanair plane diverted to Belarus so 'opposition blogger could be arrested'
Belarus's president is accused of ordering the diversion to arrest the blogger, who is wanted for helping organise protests.

Alix Culbertson, news reporter
Alix Culbertson
News reporter @alixculbertson

Sunday 23 May 2021 18:10, UK
ALEXANDER LUKASHENKOBELARUSLITHUANIA
Roman Protasevich being detained by police in Belarus in 2017 during a protest
Image:
Roman Protasevich being detained by police in Belarus in 2017 during a protest. File pic



Why you can trust Sky News
A Ryanair flight has been diverted and forced to land in the Belarus capital Minsk so an opposition blogger could be arrested, it has been claimed.

Roman Protasevich was flying from Athens on a commercial Ryanair flight bound for Vilnius, Lithuania's capital, when the aircraft was forced to change direction and land in Minsk.

The plane was escorted to the city by a warplane following reports it had explosives on board, according to an online flight tracker and Belarus state news agency BeITA.

However opposition in Belarus called the incident a hijacking operation by the government.


Ryanair is operating at reduced capacity and hopes for a vaccine-led reopening of the skies
Image:
A Ryanair flight the blogger was on was diverted to Minsk, where he was arrested
Mr Protasevich was arrested after the plane touched down and no explosives were found.

He runs the opposition Telegram news channel NEXTA, which is hostile to Belarus President Alexander Lukashenko and has become one of the main sources of news about demonstrations in Belarus.

The blogger was placed on a wanted list after last year's mass street protests following an election in which Mr Lukashenko, who has been in power since 1994, claimed a landslide victory.


Sky's Russia correspondent Diana Magnay said that NEXTA has been a prominent opposition voice in the country, "showing what Alexander Lukashenko does in his country and how he has been trying to suppress the opposition.

"He [President Lukashenko] has been coming after journalists one after the other and has labelled NEXTA and extremist organisation and is trying to scare anyone in Belarus who is in acting in a journalistic capacity and clearly trying to scare anyone outside of Belarus too.


Alexander Lukashenko
Image:
Mr Protasevich's Telegram channel is hostile towards Belarus President Alexander Lukashenko (pictured)
"It's an extraordinary thing to have done and I wonder how the international community will react seeing as Alexander Lukashenko, who has no authority the likes of Ryanair, clearly threatened the Ryanair pilots and managed to get his own security agents on board and had this plane diverted and landed at Minsk."

Diana adds that the Belarussian president is "clearly scared of" Mr Protasevich, given the lengths he went to to detain him.

A Lithuanian airport authority spokeswoman said the plane, which was scheduled to land in Vilnius at 12pm BST, was diverted to Minsk due to a conflict between the crew and a passenger.

Mr Lukashenko personally ordered a warplane to escort the Ryanair flight to Minsk, BeITA reported.

Lithuanian president Gitanas Nauseda said: "The Belarus regime is behind the abhorrent action.

"I demand to free Roman Protasevic urgently!"

He called on NATO and the EU to react to "Belarus's threat to international civil aviation".

His presidential adviser said the operation to land the plane in Belarus seemed pre-planned and the government knew who was onboard.

Thousands of people gather at Minsk's Independence Square in Belarus, protesting against the recent reelection for a sixth term of Alexander Lukashenko
Image:
Protests against Mr Lukashenko's sixth term in office in August 2020
Carl Bildt, the European Council's co-chair on foreign relations, said: "This is piracy - plain and simple.

"The Ryanair flight was just about to enter Lithuanian airspace.

"If there had been a real emergency Vilnius was clearly the most nearby airport."

Exiled opposition leader Sviatlana Tsikhanouskaya, who Mr Protasevich supported, called on the International Civil Aviation Organisation to open an investigation.

Russian President Vladimir Putin skiing with Mr Lukashenko ski following their talks in February
She said: "It is absolutely obvious that this is an operation by the special services to hijack an aircraft in order to detain activist and blogger Roman Pratasevich.

"Not a single person who flies over Belarus can be sure of his safety."

Last year, Mr Lukashenko launched a violent crackdown on protesters, with about 35,000 people detained since August, human rights groups say.

Dozens have been jailed and authorities say more than 1,000 criminal cases have been opened against them.
 

Melodi

Disaster Cat
The Irish government is furious! This really is a big deal, imagine being a flight say from California to Hawaii, and having a Russian or Chinese fighter jet force your plane down in Bejing or Vladvostock to arrest a "dissident."
Activist held after Ryanair flight forced to land in Minsk
Updated / Sunday, 23 May 2021 17:45

The plane had been en route to Lithuania

The plane had been en route to Lithuania

Belarusian President Alexander Lukashenko ordered a Ryanair flight from Greece to Lithuania to land in Minsk this afternoon, where a Belarusian opposition activist on board was detained, prompting international condemnation.

EU member Lithuania urged the European Union and NATO to respond, Germany called for an immediate explanation and Poland's prime minister called it a "reprehensible act of state terrorism".

The head of the European Commission, Ursula von der Leyen, said Belarus's action was "utterly unacceptable".

Minister for Foreign Affairs Simon Coveney tweeted: "Extremely worrying reports of a Ryanair plane forced to land in Belarus to detain an opposition blogger. We are in contact with the Airline and EU colleagues."

A Government spokesperson said: "We are very concerned by reports from Belarus about a Ryanair flight being diverted to Minsk airport by Belarus authorities.

"Officials from the Department of Foreign Affairs and Department of Transport are in contact with the airline and following events closely. We are also in contact with EU partners. The flight and all passengers should be allowed to resume their journey forthwith."

The aircraft, flying from Athens to Vilnius, had almost reached Lithuania when it changed direction and was escorted to Minsk, the Belarusian capital, after reports that it had explosives on board, according to an online flight tracker and BelTA state news agency.

Belarusian law enforcers took activist Roman Protasevich from the plane and detained him.

The 26-year-old was placed on a wanted list after street protests last year following a presidential election in which Mr Lukashenko was declared the winner but opponents complained of electoral fraud.

Mr Lukashenko personally ordered a warplane to escort the Boeing to Minsk, BelTA reported. No explosives were found, it said.

Lithuania and traditional Russian ally Belarus are neighbours and former members of the Soviet Union.

Lithuania is now a member of the European Union, Belarus is not.

Lithuanian President Gitanas Nauseda called for an international response.

"I call on NATO and EU allies to immediately react to the threat posed to international civil aviation by the Belarus regime. The international community must take immediate steps that this does not repeat," Mr Nauseda said.



Lithuanian presidential adviser Asta Skaisgiryte said the operation to force-land the plane carrying around 170 people from 12 countries seemed to be pre-planned.

She said Belarus intelligence services knew who was on board the plane, which was forced to land with the help of MIG-29 fighter jet.

Mr Protasevich had lived in Vilnius since November, she said.

A Lithuanian airport authority spokeswoman told Reuters the plane, scheduled to land in Vilnius earlier today, is now expected to land later.

Ryanair said the plane's crew were notified by Belarus of a potential security threat on board and were instructed to divert to the nearest airport, Minsk.

The plane landed safely, passengers were offloaded and security checks were made by local authorities, it said.

The delay was regrettable and outside its control, it added.

The Belarus department for organised crime control also reported that Mr Protasevich had been detained but then deleted the statement from its Telegram channel.

In power since 1994, Mr Lukashenko launched a violent crackdown on the 2020 street protests.

Around 35,000 people have been detained since August, human rights groups say.

Dozens have received jail terms.

Authorities say that more than 1,000 criminal cases have been launched.

Mr Protasevich is one of the founders of the opposition news service NEXT, a Telegram channel that has become one of the main sources of news about demonstrations in Belarus.

It is hostile to Mr Lukashenko and helps to coordinate protests.

Belarusian opposition politician Svetlana Tsikhanouskaya, Mr Lukashenko's main rival at the last election, said Belarus authorities "placed at risk safety of passengers on board and all of the civil aviation for the sake of punishment of the man who was an editor of Belarus's largest independent Telegram channe
 

northern watch

TB Fanatic
Holy Unprintable Bat Man! Now, this guy is diverting civilian airliners with fighter jets to pull opposition leaders living in exile off of it! Ryanair is based in Ireland and is pretty much the "Southwest" Airlines of European budget flights. I can only imagine the terror of the passengers on the plane and the fate of the person pulled off it. I hope there is strong international condemnation of this, otherwise, flying just got even more concerning than it already is.

View: https://twitter.com/CNN/status/1396506667974529025

The President of Belarus ordered a fighter jet to intercept a Ryanair plane carrying an opposition activist, who was then arrested in Minsk

Belarus activist arrested after his plane makes emergency landing in Minsk
A leading Belarusian opposition activist in exile has been arrested in Belarus after his flight from Athens to Vilnius made an emergency landing in the capital city.
cnn.com
Melodi,

What was the original flight path of the Ryanair plane?
 

Melodi

Disaster Cat
I do hope this dictator did this on his own, I don't think Putin would be this stupid even if he is on really good terms with him and Belarus is almost a client State (almost).
Belarus diverts Ryanair flight to arrest journalist, says opposition
Published33 minutes ago
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Ryanair file image
IMAGE COPYRIGHTREUTERS
A Ryanair plane flying from Greece to Lithuania has been diverted to Belarus, with the country's opposition figures saying it was done so a dissident journalist on board could be arrested.
The Nexta media network said its ex-editor Roman Protasevich was detained.

Belarus state media said the plane was diverted to Minsk because of a bomb scare but no explosives were found.
European nations have reacted with outrage, accusing Belarus of "state terrorism" and demanding punishment.
Political figures across Europe have already called for the EU and Nato to intervene.
UK Foreign Secretary Dominic Raab warned the "outlandish action" would have "serious implications".

Belarus opposition leader Svetlana Tikhanovskaya, who was beaten by Alexander Lukashenko in presidential polls last year widely denounced as rigged, was among those demanding Mr Protasevich's release.

Since August's election, 66-year-old Mr Lukashenko, who has ruled the country since 1994, has cracked down on dissenting voices. Many opposition figures have been arrested or, like Ms Tikhanovskaya, fled into exile.
How was the flight diverted?
Flight FR4978 was en route from Athens to the Lithuanian capital Vilnius on Sunday when it turned east to Belarus's capital Minsk shortly before it reached the Lithuania border. Greece and Lithuania put the number of passengers on board at 171.
In a statement, Ryanair said the crew were "notified by Belarus (Air Traffic Control) of a potential security threat on board and were instructed to divert to the nearest airport, Minsk".

The flight path, visible on the Flightradar24 website, suggests the plane was actually nearer to Vilnius than Minsk when it turned.
Supporters of Roman Protasevich wait for his arrival at Vilnius airport
IMAGE COPYRIGHTREUTERS
image captionSupporters of Roman Protasevich wait for his arrival at Vilnius airport
Ryanair said checks in Minsk found "nothing untoward" and the aircraft was cleared to depart after about five hours on the ground. There is no indication yet it has left.

"Ryanair has notified the relevant national and European safety and security agencies and we apologise sincerely to all affected passengers for this regrettable delay which was outside Ryanair's control," it added.
The Ryanair statement made no mention of Mr Protasevich.

Nexta was the first to break the news of his arrest.

Nexta editor-in-chief, Tadeusz Giczan, tweeted a quote from a passenger on the plane who said that Mr Protasevich had told them who he was once they were on the ground at Minsk, with him adding "they'll execute me here".
Belta, the state-owned news agency in Belarus, said Mr Lukashenko had personally given the order for the plane to land in Minsk following the bomb alert, and that a MiG-29 fighter jet had been despatched to accompany the Ryanair plane.
What has the reaction been?
It has been angry and it is growing.

Lithuanian President Gitanas Nauseda accused Belarus of an "abhorrent action".

The BBC is not responsible for the content of external sites.View original tweet on Twitter
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Latvia's Foreign Minister Edgars Rinkevics said Belarus's action was "contrary to international law" and the reaction should be "strong and effective".

Greece and France expressed anger. Poland's Prime Minister Mateusz Morawiecki said: "Hijacking a civilian plane is an unprecedented act of state terrorism that cannot go unpunished."

The EU's foreign policy chief Josep Borrell said Belarus would be held responsible for the safety of all passengers on the aircraft.

In the UK, Tom Tugendhat, chairman of the House of Commons foreign affairs committee, said that "forcing an aircraft to land to silence opposition voices is an attack on democracy".
line

Analysis box by James Landale, Diplomatic correspondent

We do not yet know the full details of this story but its implications could be huge.
There are questions about freedom of the air: how vulnerable may other flights be to this kind of behaviour? Some are already calling it an act of aggression or state terrorism, a form of hijacking. In how much danger were the passengers placed? What precedent may be set? Should flights be diverted away from Belarus airspace?
There are questions for international law: to what extent was this act unlawful, as many presume, and if so, what consequences should there be? There are questions about freedom of speech: will critics of other authoritarian regimes fear this could happen to them?
And there are questions for international diplomacy. Political figures across Europe have already called for the EU and Nato to intervene. There are demands for further sanctions to be imposed on the government of Belarus, whose legitimacy is questioned by many in the West after disputed elections last year. President Lukashenko is often described as Europe's last dictator. Will the word "pirate" now be added to his list of titles?
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Map

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Who is Protasevich and what is Nexta?
Nexta is a media operation with a Telegram channel, and has visibility on Twitter and YouTube.
It played a key role for the Belarus opposition during the election and has continued to so in its aftermath.
Ms Tikhanovskaya said Mr Protasevich, 26, had left Belarus in 2019 and covered the events of the 2020 presidential election with Nexta, after which criminal charges were filed against him in Belarus.
She said he faced the death penalty in Belarus as he has been categorised as a terrorist.
Western leaders have backed Ms Tikhanovskaya, who claimed victory in the election before she was forced to leave for Lithuania. She had become a candidate after her husband was jailed and barred from running.
Tens of thousands of protesters thronged the capital Minsk for months last year, furious at Mr Lukashenko's declaration of victory. There have been numerous cases of police brutality and some 2,700 prosecutions this year alone.
 

Melodi

Disaster Cat
Melodi,

What was the original flight path of the Ryanair plane?
It is in the article I just posted - above, this is a very sudden and rapid story - apparently, the plane was almost in EU airspace, the pilot was radioed by the fighter jet and told there was a bomb on board. If that had been true, it would have been much safer and faster to go on to Lithuania which was closer, instead, the fighter plane forced the flight back to land in Minsk, or at least that is what I think happened. This is a serious breaking story.
 

northern watch

TB Fanatic
The Ryanair flight was from Athens to Vilnius. Would this be considered an act of war?
It is in the article I just posted - above, this is a very sudden and rapid story - apparently, the plane was almost in EU airspace, the pilot was radioed by the fighter jet and told there was a bomb on board. If that had been true, it would have been much safer and faster to go on to Lithuania which was closer, instead, the fighter plane forced the flight back to land in Minsk, or at least that is what I think happened. This is a serious breaking story.
So the flight was thru Belarussian airspace?
 

Melodi

Disaster Cat
Best seen at link, the photos don't copy...
Belarus accused of ‘abhorrent action’ after Ryanair flight diverted to arrest blogger
Roman Protasevich wanted for organising last year’s protests against Alexander Lukashenko

Belarus police detain Roman Protasevich in 2017.
Belarus police detain Roman Protasevich in 2017. Photograph: Sergei Grits/AP
Andrew Roth in Moscow
Sun 23 May 2021 16.14 BST

267
Belarusian authorities appear to have forced a Ryanair jet to perform an emergency landing in Minsk in order to arrest an opposition blogger wanted for organising last summer’s protests against leader Alexander Lukashenko.

Roman Protasevich, a former editor of the influential Telegram channels Nexta and Nexta Live, was detained by police after his flight was diverted to Minsk national airport due to a bomb threat. Minsk confirmed it had scrambled a Mig-29 fighter to escort the plane.

Protasevich has been accused of terrorism and provoking riots after the Nexta channels became one of the main conduits for organising last year’s anti-Lukashenko protests over elections fraud. Protasevich had been living in exile in 2019 and Poland had previously rejected an extradition request sent by Minsk.

Protasevich was flying on an intra-EU flight from Athens to Vilnius, the capital of Lithuania, when the plane was diverted to Minsk. According to online flight data, the plane was over Belarusian airspace when it diverted course but was closer to Vilnius than Minsk.

Forcing the emergency landing of a European jetliner would be an extraordinary act even for Lukashenko’s government, which has launched a broad crackdown on opposition leaders and independent media.

European officials reacted angrily on Sunday, as governments that have been strongly critical of Lukashenko called the grounding of an airliner a dangerous act without precedent.

“Unprecedented event!” wrote Gitanas Nausėda, the president of Lithuania. “A civilian passenger plane flying to Vilnius was forcibly landed in #Minsk. Belarusian political activist & founder of @NEXTA_EN was on the plane. He is arrested. The regime is behind the abhorrent action. I demand to free Roman Protasevich urgently!”

Protasevich had been covering a visit to Athens by Svetlana Tikhanovskaya, a former presidential candidate who has declared herself the country’s leader-in-exile due to widespread fraud during last year’s elections.

“The regime forced the landing @Ryanair plane in Minsk to arrest journalist and activist Raman Pratasevich. He faces the death penalty in Belarus. We demand immediate release of Raman, @ICAO investigation, and sanctions against Belarus,” she wrote in a series of Tweets. “Lukashenka’s regime endangered the lives of passengers onboard the plane. From now – no one flying over Belarus – can be secure. International reaction needed!”

The Guardian has approached Ryanair, which has its headquarters in Ireland, for comment.

Protasevich, who has been living in exile since 2019, told colleagues earlier on Sunday he had been followed while travelling to the airport in Athens. A Russian speaker had followed him into a line at the airport and attempted to photograph his documents, he wrote to colleagues.

“He was next in line at the document check and just turned around and walked away,” he said. “For some reason, he also tried to secretly photograph my documents.” Colleagues said they had not heard from him since.
 

Red Baron

Paleo-Conservative
_______________
A state sponsored hijacking of a commercial airliner under false pretenses?

That plane and it's passengers need to be released RTF now or expect a visit from some NATO warplanes.
 

Melodi

Disaster Cat
I suspect emergency meetings are underway in the EU and the UK/NATO right now, and there may not be many more details for a couple of hours, except a hope that the plane will be allowed to fly on the Vilnius. Underling is Zero Hedge, not mine this time.

Belarus Sends MiG Fighters To Divert Foreign Airliner, Arrests Anti-Lukashenko Journalist On Board
Tyler Durden's Photo

BY TYLER DURDEN
SUNDAY, MAY 23, 2021 - 11:35 AM
A bizarre and alarming incident which officials are calling unprecedented unfolded over the skies of Eastern Europe on Sunday. A Ryanair flight which had departed Athens and was en route to Vilnius - the capital of Lithuania - was forced to land in Belarus to allow state intelligence and security services to detain a journalist who's long been critical of President Alexander Lukashenko.

Bloomberg has identified the detained journalist is Raman Pratasevich, described as "the former editor-in-chief of the most popular Telegram news channel in Belarus" who was "arrested in the Minsk airport after the plane landed, according to the Minsk-based human rights center Viasna, which is not officially registered by the country’s authorities."

Neighboring Lithuania had earlier issued Pratasevich asylum after Belarusian authorities had put him on a "terror watch list" related to his journalistic activities, given the 26-year old blogger and activist helped spearhead last year's anti-Lukashenko demonstrations which at times shut down large parts of central Minsk following the disputed August 2020 election which resulted in prolonging the autocrat's rule to a sixth term (which will see him into three decades in power).
The journalist has been dubbed an "extremist" for his role in covering and participating in protests which officials also alleged there was a "foreign hand" behind which had covert NATO support. Pratasevich now faces a severe sentence - if he even goes to trial at all, with some supporters going so far as to suggest a possible death penalty case.

Astoundingly, Belarus' military had scrambled MiG fighter jets in order to divert the plane to Minsk. Bloomberg continues, "The plane, which was flying over Belarus en route to Lithuania, was escorted to Minsk by a MiG-29 fighter jet after a bomb threat, Belarusian state news agency Belta reported, citing the Minsk airport’s press service."

The bomb threat, however, is being widely perceived as but a ruse which ensured the plane would be on Belarusian soil in order to facilitate the controversial detention.
Germany's Deutsche Welle details:
An airport spokesperson told the agency that although authorities did not find any explosive devices on the plane, it was unclear when it would be allowed to take off again.
The opposition Telegram channel Nexta also reported that the plane was searched and that authorities detained the outlet's former editor, Roman Protasevich.
"The plane was checked, no bomb was found and all passengers were sent for another security search," said Nexta. "Among them was... Nexta journalist Roman Protasevich. He was detained."
Image via NEXTA
The episode is quickly gaining international attention and raising alarm in NATO and the European Union, with Lithuanian President Gitanas Nauseda issuing a statement on Twitter condemning the "unprecedented" and "abhorrent" action of Lukashenko's government.

President Nauseda also said in a written statement released to international press agencies that: "I call on NATO and EU allies to immediately react to the threat posed to international civil aviation by the Belarus regime." He added, "The international community must take immediate steps that this does not repeat."

Also interesting will be the added pressure on both Belarus and Lukashenko-ally Putin over the brazen intervention in a foreign airline's flight path (Ryanair DAC is based in Ireland and did not immediately comment in the hours after the incident), given especially the two leaders are expected to meet again in Sochi this week, Rossiya-1 television reported.
Putin has been widely seen in the West as enabling Lukashenko's dictatorial rule, with Russian officials also seeing recent protests in the former Soviet satellite state as West-backed 'color revolution' activity fueled by external powers designed to expand NATO influence by seeking overthrow of Russia-friendly governments.
 

Melodi

Disaster Cat
OK, I am getting the impression that the main goal right now is to get the passengers and the plane back into the EU and out of Belarus. There probably isn't much they can do for the Journalist that was abducted, but if Mr. Dictator doesn't release the passengers and the plane quickly, well things could get very sporty in the next few hours.
 

northern watch

TB Fanatic
Holy Unprintable Bat Man! Now, this guy is diverting civilian airliners with fighter jets to pull opposition leaders living in exile off of it! Ryanair is based in Ireland and is pretty much the "Southwest" Airlines of European budget flights. I can only imagine the terror of the passengers on the plane and the fate of the person pulled off it. I hope there is strong international condemnation of this, otherwise, flying just got even more concerning than it already is.

View: https://twitter.com/CNN/status/1396506667974529025

The President of Belarus ordered a fighter jet to intercept a Ryanair plane carrying an opposition activist, who was then arrested in Minsk

Belarus activist arrested after his plane makes emergency landing in Minsk
A leading Belarusian opposition activist in exile has been arrested in Belarus after his flight from Athens to Vilnius made an emergency landing in the capital city.
cnn.com
I guess now the activists must ask does this flight fly thru country A, B, or C's airspace?
 

northern watch

TB Fanatic
From this incident, am I correct to say that the airlines share the passengers list with the countries that a plane flies thru their airspace?
 

northern watch

TB Fanatic
Ryanair flight forced to land in Belarus with top activist onboard
Belarus accused of diverting the flight to arrest the activist.
By Patrick Reevell
ABC News
23 May 2021, 09:52

Belarus is accused of forcing a Ryanair passenger plane to land in the country so that authorities could arrest a leading blogger who helped organize last year's protests against the country's authoritarian leader Alexander Lukashenko.

The Ryanair flight was passing through Belarus' airspace while traveling from Athens to Lithuania's capital Vilnius, when it was forced to divert to Minsk for an emergency landing because of a false bomb threat. On the ground, security agents arrested Roman Protasevich, founder of the social media news channel, NEXTA, which played a crucial role in the protests last summer.

Belarusian authorities claimed they had responded to a request for help from the flight about a bomb threat onboard. The plane was then escorted by a Belarusian fighter jet to a Minsk airport.



PHOTO: A Ryanair Boeing 737-8AS (flight number FR4978) is parked on Minsk International Airport's apron in Minsk, May 23, 2021.

AFP via Getty Images
AFP via Getty Images
A Ryanair Boeing 737-8AS (flight number FR4978) is parked on Minsk International Airport's apron in Minsk, May 23, 2021.

But Belarus' opposition and European countries accused Belarusian authorities of using the fake bomb scare to force the plan to land as a part of a pre-planned operation to seize Protasevich.

Nexta's editor-in-chief Tadeusz Giczan alleged that agents from Belarus' KGB security service onboard the flight had forced the crew to declare an emergency.

"KGB operatives boarded the plane in Athens this morning together with Roman Protasevich
. Then when the plane has entered Belarus airspace KGB officers initiated a fight with the Ryanair crew, insisting there's an IED onboard. Eventually the crew was forced to send out SOS (literally moments before the plane would've left Belarus airspace)," Giczan wrote on Twitter.

The president of the European Union Commission Ursula Von Der Leyen called the move to divert the flight "utterly unacceptable" and warned it must bear consequences.

"ALL passengers must be able to continue their travel to Vilnius immediately and their safety ensured. Any violation of international air transport rules must bear consequences."

Lithuania's president Gitanas Nausėda described the situation as "unprecedented" and "abhorrent," and called for a response from NATO and the European Union.

Ryanair, in a short statement, said the plane was told to divert to Minsk by Belarusian air traffic control because of a "potential security threat on-board".

The airline said the plane landed safely in Minsk and passengers disembarked while security checks were carried out and that "nothing untoward" was found. It said passengers were allowed to embark after around five hours and that the plane was expected to take off around 7 p.m. local time.

"Ryanair has notified the relevant national and European safety and security agencies and we apologise sincerely to all affected passengers for this regrettably delay which was outside Ryanair's control," the airline said. It made no mention of Protasevich in the statement.

NEXTA, the news outlet that Protasevich founded on the Telegram messenger app, has been central to the protests that broke out against Lukashenko last summer. The outlet helped coordinate the largely leaderless demonstrations and published videos of them and police violence that helped catalyze the protests, which saw hundreds of thousands peacefully take to the streets calling for Lukashenko to step down. It and its sister channel NEXTA Live have close to two million subscribers.

Belarus' authorities placed Protasevich on a terrorism watchlist last year and have opened criminal cases against him on charges of organizing mass riots and inciting hatred, offenses that carry sentences of up to 12 to 15 years in prison. Belarus' opposition have said they fear he could now face the death penalty.

Protasevich had been in Athens covering a trip by the exiled leader of Belarus' democracy opposition, Svetlana Tikhanovskaya, who is now based in Lithuania.

Tikhanovskaya condemned his arrest, calling for an investigation into the incident and more sanctions on Lukashenko's government.

"Lukashenka's [sic] regime endangered the lives of passengers onboard the plane. From now – no one flying over Belarus – can be secure. International reaction needed!" she wrote on Twitter.

Ryanair flight forced to land in Belarus with top activist onboard - ABC News (go.com)
 

northern watch

TB Fanatic
From my last post

"KGB operatives boarded the plane in Athens this morning together with Roman Protasevich. Then when the plane has entered Belarus airspace KGB officers initiated a fight with the Ryanair crew, insisting there's an IED onboard. Eventually the crew was forced to send out SOS (literally moments before the plane would've left Belarus airspace)," Giczan wrote on Twitter.

There is a lot to this story!

Did Greece know that KGB operatives were in Athens?
 

Melodi

Disaster Cat
If the KGB really is involved and this isn't just confusing reporting, then things just went to even a higher level of concern. Now if they are actually Belarusian Thugs, well that's another story (still bad, but not as bad).
 

Melodi

Disaster Cat
He seems to be an actual journalist as well as a blogger but there's a lot that isn't clear. He did help invent an app that allowed protesters to coordinate on their smartphones but he may also have been head of an opposition news agency (hard to tell, reporting on this is all over the map).

So far I am only seeing the KGB Agent thing from sources in the USA which given the political climate I will remain open-minded until we hear more. It could be real and that the Europeans just don't want to "go there" yet or this may be another case of "Rusia, Rusia, Rusia" and the agents are actually from Baularas itself.

Not much more in this article except the note at the bottom that there is work being done to try to get the passengers and the plane out of the area. Again, I think everyone is walking on eggshells until they are and/or it is clear they are hostages (if they are).

Belarus arrests journalist Roman Pratasevich after diverting Ryanair flight to Minsk
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By Euronews with AP, AFP • Updated: 23/05/2021 - 18:27

Image taken from Flightradar24 showing route of #FR4978

Image taken from Flightradar24 showing route of #FR4978 - Copyright Credit: @flightradar24
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A founder of a messaging app channel in Belarus, that has been a key information conduit for opponents of Belarus’ authoritarian president was arrested Sunday, after a plane he was on made an emergency landing in Belarus.
Roman Pratasevich, 26, is a former collaborator of Belarusian opposition channel Nexta. He was arrested, after the Ryanair flight FR4978 from Athens to Vilnius in Lithuania, was diverted.

Germany's Secretary of State for the Foreign Office Miguel Berger said "We need an immediate explanation by the Government of Belarus on the diversion of a Ryan Air flight within the EU to Minsk and the alleged detention of a journalist.



The presidential press service said that Belarus President Alexander Lukashenko personally ordered a MiG-29 fighter jet accompany the Ryanair plane to the Minsk airport. It said a bomb threat was received while the plane was over Belarusian territory; officials later said no explosives were found on board. There was no immediate comment from Ryanair.
Last November, the Belarusian security services (KGB) placed Pratasevich on the list of "individuals involved in terrorist activities". He was a cofounder of the Nexta Telegram channel that's played a leading role in the wave of protests in Belarus against the 2020 re-election of President Lukashenko, who has held the position since 1994.
The protest movement following the August 2020 presidential election ruled fraudulent by the opposition and western countries gathered tens of thousands of people in Minsk and other cities, a huge mobilization for a country of 9.5 million inhabitants.
But the protests gradually faltered in the face of mass arrests and police violence that left at least four people dead, ongoing judicial harassment and heavy prison sentences imposed on activists and journalists.

Pratasevich, who had fled the country for Poland, faces charges that could carry a prison sentence of up to 15 years.
Exiled Belarus opposition leader Sviatlana Tsikhanouskaya called on the International Civil Aviation Organization to begin an investigation.

“It is absolutely obvious that this is an operation by the special services to hijack an aircraft in order to detain activist and blogger Raman Pratasevich,” she said in a statement. “Not a single person who flies over Belarus can be sure of his safety.”
Gabrielius Landsbergis, the Foreign Minister of Lithuania said on Twitter that they are working with international partners to get the passengers on the Ryanair flight securely to their original destination Vilnius.
 

Melodi

Disaster Cat
From Twitter

https://twitter.com/Intel_Sky




INTELSky

@Intel_Sky

·
1h


Poland's PM calls the Belarus incident 'state terrorism' and suggests the EU discusses sanctions against Belarus on Monday:
Quote Tweet


eSy4T8j3_normal.jpg


Mateusz Morawiecki

@MorawieckiM
· 3h
I have asked @eucopresident to expand tomorrow's #EUCO agenda and discuss immediate sanctions against A. Lukashenka regime. Hijacking of a civilian plane is an unprecedented act of state terrorism. It cannot go unpunished.
 

somdwatcher

Veteran Member
Does Belarus do any significant trading/commerce with the European Union? Thought they mainly dealt with Russia and China. Sanctions will not stop actions such as this, on the contrary it will encourage further episodes.
 

Melodi

Disaster Cat
I'm posting this from RTE because while there is some repetition from the earlier article, it calls the agents Belarus Intelligence Agents not KGB. Again they may ultimately turn out to be KGB, the two nations are closely allied but at this point, the Europeans are not identifying them as such.
Activist held after Ryanair flight forced to land in Minsk
Updated / Sunday, 23 May 2021 19:49

The plane had been en route to Lithuania

The plane had been en route to Lithuania

Belarusian President Alexander Lukashenko ordered a Ryanair flight from Greece to Lithuania to land in Minsk this afternoon, where a Belarusian opposition activist on board was detained, prompting international condemnation.

EU member Lithuania urged the European Union and NATO to respond, Germany called for an immediate explanation and Poland's prime minister called it a "reprehensible act of state terrorism".

The head of the European Commission, Ursula von der Leyen, said Belarus's action was "utterly unacceptable".

Taoiseach Micheál Martin said on Twitter: "The forced landing of a passenger plane in Belarus today to detain a journalist is absolutely unacceptable.

"These unprecedented actions have caused widespread concern across the EU – and they must be addressed at tomorrow's #EUCO (EU Council)."

Minister for Foreign Affairs Simon Coveney tweeted: "Extremely worrying reports of a Ryanair plane forced to land in Belarus to detain an opposition blogger. We are in contact with the Airline and EU colleagues."

A Government spokesperson said: "We are very concerned by reports from Belarus about a Ryanair flight being diverted to Minsk airport by Belarus authorities.

"Officials from the Department of Foreign Affairs and Department of Transport are in contact with the airline and following events closely. We are also in contact with EU partners. The flight and all passengers should be allowed to resume their journey forthwith."


The aircraft, flying from Athens to Vilnius, had almost reached Lithuania when it changed direction and was escorted to Minsk, the Belarusian capital, after reports that it had explosives on board, according to an online flight tracker and BelTA state news agency.

Belarusian law enforcers took activist Roman Protasevich from the plane and detained him.

The 26-year-old was placed on a wanted list after street protests last year following a presidential election in which Mr Lukashenko was declared the winner but opponents complained of electoral fraud.

Mr Lukashenko personally ordered a warplane to escort the Boeing to Minsk, BelTA reported. No explosives were found, it said.

Lithuania and traditional Russian ally Belarus are neighbours and former members of the Soviet Union.

Lithuania is now a member of the European Union, Belarus is not.

Lithuanian President Gitanas Nauseda called for an international response.

"I call on NATO and EU allies to immediately react to the threat posed to international civil aviation by the Belarus regime. The international community must take immediate steps that this does not repeat," Mr Nauseda said.



Lithuanian presidential adviser Asta Skaisgiryte said the operation to force-land the plane carrying around 170 people from 12 countries seemed to be pre-planned.

She said Belarus intelligence services knew who was on board the plane, which was forced to land with the help of MIG-29 fighter jet.

Mr Protasevich had lived in Vilnius since November, she said.

A Lithuanian airport authority spokeswoman told Reuters the plane, scheduled to land in Vilnius earlier today, is now expected to land later.

Ryanair said the plane's crew were notified by Belarus of a potential security threat on board and were instructed to divert to the nearest airport, Minsk.

The plane landed safely, passengers were offloaded and security checks were made by local authorities, it said.

The delay was regrettable and outside its control, it added.

The Belarus department for organised crime control also reported that Mr Protasevich had been detained but then deleted the statement from its Telegram channel.

In power since 1994, Mr Lukashenko launched a violent crackdown on the 2020 street protests.

Around 35,000 people have been detained since August, human rights groups say.

Dozens have received jail terms.

Authorities say that more than 1,000 criminal cases have been launched.

Mr Protasevich is one of the founders of the opposition news service NEXT, a Telegram channel that has become one of the main sources of news about demonstrations in Belarus.

It is hostile to Mr Lukashenko and helps to coordinate protests.

Belarusian opposition politician Svetlana Tsikhanouskaya, Mr Lukashenko's main rival at the last election, said Belarus authorities "placed at risk safety of passengers on board and all of the civil aviation for the sake of punishment of the man who was an editor of Belarus's largest independent Telegram channel".
 

Red Baron

Paleo-Conservative
_______________
It is very interesting that Belarus would be willing to invoke the ire of the international community just to snag one anti-government journalist/activist.

Makes me wonder what else Belarus is capable of in order to prop up it's pathetic totalitarian post-Commie regime.
 

Melodi

Disaster Cat
It is very interesting that Belarus would be willing to invoke the ire of the entire international community just to snag one anti-government journalist/activist.

Makes me wonder what else Belarus is capable of in order to prop up it's pathetic totalitarian post-Commie regime.
As I told Nightwolf, this is either a serious case of Dictator Brain (that's a real medical condition) or there's something much larger going on and I'm not sure which one it is yet.

If the KGB is involved, it is part of something larger, if it is just the Dictator playing an Idi Amin card, then it becomes a different problem.

I waiting to see how or if Putin reacts publically, the longer he waits to condemn this action the worse things are starting to look.
 
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