https://www.armstrongeconomics.com/worl ... trictions/
So when exactly did Boris announce curfews, apparently they began kicking the idea around on the 9th September, two days after the above article, staring on the 24th, funny that. And now we are apparently entering into a police state, with every world leader banging on about a BUILD BACK BETTER as if they'd personally come up with that grammatically impaired slogan.Belarusian President Aleksandr Lukashenko said last month via Belarusian Telegraph Agency, BelTA., that World Bank and IMF offered him a bribe of $940 million USD in the form of “Covid Relief Aid.” In exchange for $940 million USD, the World Bank and IMF demanded that the President of Belarus:
• imposed “extreme lockdown on his people”
• force them to wear face masks
• impose very strict curfews
• impose a police state
• crash the economy
Belarus President Aleksandr Lukashenko REFUSED the offer and stated that he could not accept such an offer and would put his people above the needs of the IMF and World Bank.
Then followed up with a nice 9-11 story, complete with a 66 + 6:
https://www.bbc.co.uk/news/world-europe-53637365
Well hello BBC, did you compose that one with a straight face, or do the bots write it?Belarus President Alexander Lukashenko, Europe's longest-serving ruler, is facing unprecedented opposition to his power.
The 66-year-old former Soviet farm boss claimed a sixth term as president in a widely disputed election on 9 August. He has faced weeks of mass protests against his rule.
About 100,000 people have rallied against him weekly in Minsk - by far the biggest opposition protests of his rule.
Mr Lukashenko has been in power since 1994, with an authoritarian style reminiscent of the Soviet era, controlling the main media channels, harassing and jailing political opponents and marginalising independent voices.
Coincidence or attack dogs? ... 29th September:
https://www.mirror.co.uk/news/world-new ... t-22762698
Is that "human rights abuses" like the Met sending in riot police to break up a peaceful planned demonstration?Britain has slapped massive sanctions as punishment for “human rights abuses and thuggery” on eight Belarus officials including its President Alexander Lukashenko and his son.
The UK joined hands with Canada to impose the landmark punishments accusing Lukashenko of a “string of human rights abuses” including torture against opposition leaders and journalists.
Hundreds of people have been forcibly slapped in jail for demonstrating against Lukashenko's brutal regime as civil unrest has increasingly gripped the entire country.
Some have disappeared and many others have been thrown out of the country, denied re-entry in case they continue their peaceful campaign to unseat the tyrannical leader.