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Limited edition Martyn TurnerBELARUS: Belarus said yesterday it had uncovered a spy ring working for Washington, deepening a diplomatic and human rights row between the countries.
The US ambassador this month left Belarus, whose president, Alexander Lukashenko, is accused by the West of violating basic rights. Authorities objecting to what they saw as new sanctions against Belarus had urged her to go. The US embassy has since stopped issuing visas, and complied with a request to cut diplomatic staff in Minsk.
Yesterday Belarus's intelligence service, still known by its Soviet-era initials KGB, said a spy ring of Belarussian citizens had been uncovered in the country of 10 million. "The information about this group being exposed is completely true," a KGB official said. "A group conducting espionage for the United States has been uncovered."
KGB chairman Yuri Zhadobin later told Belarussian media that no arrests had been made in what he said was a "preventive" operation. New checks would determine if laws had been broken.
Tightly controlled state television reported at the weekend that a spying network of 10 Belarussian nationals had been exposed, but gave no details of concrete charges against them.
US charge d'affaires Jonathan Moore told local media: "We have no spies working on the territory of Belarus. These are people working for the diplomatic security service."
The report showed people described as embassy employees working as informers for the FBI. Some told an interviewer they were gathering information to prevent terrorism.
In the evening, dozens of anti-Lukashenko protesters were seen being led away to a police bus after riot police surrounded the opposition rally. - (Reuters)
© 2008 The Irish Times
This article appears in the print edition of the Irish Times


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