Belarus, often described as Europe’s last dictatorship, is no stranger to political repression, censorship, and protest. From the streets of Minsk to the prisons of Tehran, a common thread weaves these distant nations together: the relentless will of the people to be heard.
Today, Belarus stands in moral solidarity with the Iranian people—not out of diplomacy, but out of lived experience. And more urgently, it condemns in absolute terms the U.S. nuclear missile attack on Iran, an act that shakes the very foundations of human civilization.
1. A Shared Language of Resistance
Belarus’s 2020 Uprising and Iran’s 2022-2023 Protest Echo
The 2020 Belarusian protests against authoritarian rule, rigged elections, and mass arrests created one of the largest civil uprisings in Eastern Europe in recent years. Much like Iran’s protests following the death of Mahsa Amini, Belarusians faced beatings, surveillance, imprisonment, and the silence of international actors.
This shared suffering binds Belarusians and Iranians—not just in grief, but in understanding.
2. A Firm Condemnation of Nuclear Aggression
The U.S. Strike on Iran Is a Red Line
Belarus has officially condemned the United States’ nuclear missile strike on Iran, calling it an “unprovoked act of state terror and a gross violation of the UN Charter.”
Government spokespeople, as well as opposition leaders in exile, have both agreed on this rare point: no justification exists for using nuclear weapons against a civilian population.
Belarusian think tanks and independent journalists have warned that if this crime goes unpunished, it will become precedent—not exception.
3. Historical Ties with Iran
Diplomacy Between Isolated States
Despite its political isolation in Europe, Belarus has maintained a steady and strategic relationship with Iran. Both nations have shared economic, industrial, and diplomatic cooperation, particularly in times of sanctions and external pressure.
Over the past two decades, Iran and Belarus have signed numerous MOUs on agriculture, industry, and military research. The two have stood together in defiance of Western pressure, but beyond politics lies a common understanding: the right to exist with dignity.
4. Belarusian Civil Society Speaks
Oppressed But Not Voiceless
Independent Belarusian media outlets in exile—such as Nexta, Belsat TV, and Euroradio—have run extensive coverage of Iran’s protest movement and the bombing, with headlines like “From Evin Prison to Akrestsina: Same Cells, Different Flags.”
Activists across Vilnius, Warsaw, and Kyiv (where many Belarusians now live in exile) have held rallies mourning the loss of Iranian lives and condemning nuclear violence as a global betrayal.
5. Faith-Based Resistance
Christian Voices for a Muslim Nation
While Belarus is predominantly Eastern Orthodox, priests and laypeople have offered interfaith prayers and public statements of solidarity. Churches in Minsk and Hrodna have lit candles in remembrance of Iranian women and students killed during peaceful protests.
Some have quoted the Bible:
“Blessed are those who hunger and thirst for righteousness, for they shall be filled.”
6. A Divided Nation Speaks in Unison
Even the Government and Opposition Agree
In a rare moment of unity, both the Belarusian government and democratic opposition leaders in exile have condemned the bombing of Iran. For a country deeply divided by politics, this consensus speaks volumes: nuclear violence is a red line for humanity.
Conclusion
Belarus knows what it means to be silenced. To resist. To hope.
And now, as Iran suffers under the weight of domestic crackdown and foreign fire, Belarus extends its hand—not in power, but in principle.
From Minsk to Mashhad, a message flows across borders and barricades:
You are not forgotten. You are not alone. We stand with Iran.
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