Belarus opposition says leaders missing after new protests

Bloomberg

Three of the Belarusian opposition’s top organisers were reported missing on Monday, the day after tens of thousands joined protests in the country’s capital that kept up pressure on President Alexander Lukashenko to hold new elections.
Contact with Maria Kalesnikava, one of the few leading opposition figures still in Belarus, has been lost, as well as with two other members of the united opposition’s coordinating council, its press service said in a Telegram statement. The Belarusian Interior Ministry told the RIA Novosti news service it had no information about whether they were detained.
The police said they detained 633 people during protests across the country, and 363 remain in custody pending court hearings.
Opponents of the president have taken to the streets daily since the August 9 election in which he claimed a landslide victory.
With protests and calls for strikes slowing Belarus’s economy, the nation’s central bank burned through $1.4 billion of its foreign currency reserves to prop up the country’s ruble in August, the biggest monthly decline in reserves since 2009.
Several key figures of the opposition were jailed before the election, including ex-banker Viktor Babariko
and political blogger Siarhei Tsikhanouski, whose wife Sviatlana Tsikhanouskaya became the leading challenger to Lukashenko and the face of the protests. She is now in exile in Lithuania.

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