Polish diplomat: Łukašenka complained of brazen Russian leaders in 2002

October 16, Pozirk. Alaksandar Łukašenka criticized Russian leaders as “brazen people without conscience” in 2002, Mariusz Maszkiewicz, a former Polish ambassador to Belarus, recalled during an online meeting hosted by Belarusian Free University yesterday.
As Maszkiewicz was completing his stint in Minsk 22 years ago, he met Łukašenka who was furious after Russian Prime Minister Vladimir Putin had invited Belarus to join the Russian Federation.
Shortly before their meeting, Putin had rejected the Belarusian ruler’s request for economic concessions.
“We need to understand what we want and what our partners want. Flies are separate and cutlets are separate,” Putin said.
“Łukašenka was so angry that he wanted to demonstrate that he could be friends with Poland. That is why he agreed to meet me,” Maszkiewicz said, noting that Łukašenka even called him a friend of Belarus although the envoy had a reputation as a critic of the Belarusian government.
Moreover, at the time, Minsk accused Warsaw of aggressive intentions towards Belarus and bilateral relations started deteriorating.
Maszkievicz said that he had suggested that Belarus follow Russia’s lead in following through with market-oriented reforms, but Łukašenka retorted that the ambassador did not know “who is Putin” and that he would see who he is in the future.
According to Maszkievicz, the Belarusian strongman made it clear that he did not trust the Russian leaders and described them as brazen Federal Security Service (FSB) people without conscience.
- PoliticsIrregular crossings from Belarus into Lithuania resume after five-day breakThe material is available only to POZIRK+
- PoliticsKalinoŭski Regiment announces command reformsThe material is available only to POZIRK+
- PoliticsOpposition leader demands Minsk reveal Statkievič’s whereaboutsThe material is available only to POZIRK+
- PoliticsThink tank urges EU not to mirror US policy on BelarusThe material is available only to POZIRK+
- Politics, Security
- PoliticsReprisals: Belsat head, journalists wanted in RussiaThe material is available only to POZIRK+
- PoliticsEU, CoE urge Belarus to introduce legal moratorium on death penaltyThe material is available only to POZIRK+
- Politics, SocietyOpposition to Russian war prevails in Belarusian citiesThe material is available only to POZIRK+
- Economy, PoliticsPoland sanctions TST PL over links to Belarusian evasion schemesThe material is available only to POZIRK+
- SecurityPoland reports autumn peak for irregular migration from BelarusThe material is available only to POZIRK+
- PoliticsBelarus labels 27 more as “extremists” amid dissent suppressionThe material is available only to POZIRK+
- Economy, PoliticsUnion State common electricity market deal tabled for ratificationThe material is available only to POZIRK+
- Politics, SocietyCity residents view Russia as more dangerous than US – pollThe material is available only to POZIRK+
- Politics, Society
- EconomyEconomy ministry projects GDP growth below 3 percent in 2026The material is available only to POZIRK+
- EconomyCentral bank reports core inflation at 7.5 percentThe material is available only to POZIRK+
- PoliticsRights defenders document 18 more political prisonersThe material is available only to POZIRK+
- PoliticsBelarus’ FM mocks EU aspiration as unrealistic “fetish”The material is available only to POZIRK+
- SocietyLithuanian police seize €40,000 worth of Belarusian-made cigarettesThe material is available only to POZIRK+
- Economy