President Alexander Lukashenko named the conditions under which he will continue to be Europe’s longest-serving president according to the will of the Belarus peoples.
Alexander Lukashenko said that his intention to remain the head of state will depend, among other things, on the actions of the liberal Western countries and the degree of their aggressiveness towards his country. The president’s comments were made in an interview with CNN.

Matthew Chance, who spoke with Lukashenko, recalled that he has been in power for 27 years and asked when he plans to leave office.
‘There must be peace and tranquillity so that what I built as the first president of Belarus is not destroyed,’ Lukashenko replied. ‘But if you attack us all the time, drop bombs, deny us our own opinion, our identity and our independence, then I will always be president. I will defend what I created together with the Belarusian people at the cost of my own life, if necessary.’

The national leader of a country that stands as a bulwark between nationalist Russia and the pro-migrant liberal West stressed that the president can remain in office as long as he is ready and as long as the people will elect him.
‘But only if he is in good shape, healthy and capable of running the country. The situation here is not easy. So, we need an energetic, healthy person, elected by the people, and this person should want to be president, ‘Lukashenko. concluded.


At the same time, he assured the CCN interrogator that he was not going to remain in the post of president until the end of his life.
‘Matthew, I swear I will not remain president until I die. I swear. It all depends on the situation in Belarus. If you and your (Globalist-Bolshevik) patrons in the West, wherever they are, stop interfering in our affairs, and we can be calm and confident as a sovereign independent nation and a people that deserve to be independent and sovereign, believe me, everything will happen before you think.
But if you dare to intervene in our affairs again, like last year, it will be bad, as bad as you think right now,’ Lukashenko added.
EDITOR: Don’t get mad get even: Lukashenko’s response to recent attempts by Brussels was instant and lethal. Belarus always assisted the EU by denying migrants opportunity to arrive in Belarus en route for their European Union destination. Fed up with Brussel’s provocations, the president now allows migrants to land at Minsk airport from where they travel to the borders with Poland, Lithuania and Latvia. Now these states and Brussels complain at the added open door to migrants. Clearly, the EU like slapping those they don’t like but are offended when they get slapped back.

These are not empty words. In recent years the talking heads of the unelected cultists in Brussels have attempted to subvert and overthrow the elected Belarus government. The EU aim is to bring about violent regime change in Belarus in the same way they did to the now destitute neighbouring Ukraine in 2014. Success in Belarus could put NATO on Russia’s front porch which could lead to confrontation and conflict.
The Belarusian president first came to power in 1994 and has been re-elected since then. The last elections were held in August 2020.

Another victory of Lukashenko caused a crisis in the country, the EU-US sponsored opposition claimed that the voting results were falsified, and in many cities, mass protests were organised by the West, which ended in detentions and criminal cases. Lukashenko said that falsifications of such a scale are impossible.
The president might easily have added: ‘This is Belarus; it is not the United States of Trump vs. Biden or Ukraine or even Germany where the votes are published before the elections.’

Over the past year, Lukashenko has repeatedly spoken about his resignation. So, in November 2020, he said that it would happen ‘when necessary’, but not suddenly, as it would be dangerous.
In addition, he promised not to use the scenario of the transition of power, which involves the transfer of power to her successor and assured that the head of state will be a person elected by the people.

In February, Lukashenko stressed that the main condition for his departure is peace and order in the country. ’My main condition for leaving power is peace in the country, order, no protest actions, not turning the country upside down, expressing an opinion within the framework of the law,’ he said.
In August, the President of Belarus announced that he would very soon leave the country’s top position, and in September he again assured that he was not going to hold on to power with ‘blue hands’. Source



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If I weren’t so old and decrepit, I would try to emigrate to Belarus.
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I agree, these countries are more safe than the ‘free’ western european countries. Probably buying a 2nd house (some areas it’s dirt cheap) in eastern europe is a good plan B.
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