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Belarus President Alexander Lukashenko, front centre, with his youngest son Nikolai, right, during a parade marking Independence Day in Minsk today. AP Photo/Nikolai Petrov, BelTA
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Belarus blocks Twitter and Facebook in bid to prevent protests

In photos: Social networking sites blocked as Belarus celebrates its independence with military parade through the capital.

THE BELARUSIAN government blocked access to Facebook, Twitter and a major Russian social networking site today in an attempt to prevent opposition protests on a national holiday. Thousands of police and special forces were deployed in the center of Minsk, the capital.

The respected rights group Vesna said the government also detained dozens of opposition activists, including Stanislav Shushkevich, Belarus’ first post-Soviet leader. Many other activists were called in by the KGB and warned not to protest, Vesna spokesman Valentin Stefanovich said.

The government is trying to contain swelling public discontent as Belarus suffers its worst financial crisis since the fall of the Soviet Union.

President Alexander Lukashenko said Sunday that “an escalation of information intervention is under way” as part of plans drawn up in “the capitals of separate countries” to bring about a popular revolution.

“We understand that the goal of these attacks is to sow uncertainty and alarm, to destroy social harmony, and in the end to bring us to our knees and bring to naught the achievements of our independence,” Lukashenko said in opening a military parade on Independence Day, the anniversary of the end of Nazi occupation in 1944. He wore a military uniform, as did his 6-year-old son.

Belarus is under pressure from Russia and the West. Moscow has been pushing for greater control over the Belarusian economy in exchange for loans to help Lukashenko’s government weather the financial turmoil, while the European Union has threatened to expand sanctions imposed on Lukashenko as punishment for his crackdown on the opposition.

For the first time, Russian troops took part in the annual military parade. Russian state television, which broadcasts in Belarus, has supported the Belarusian protesters by showing their rough treatment at the hands of police.

A new opposition group called “Revolution by Social Networks” has held a series of Internet-organised rallies in about 30 cities and towns. The rallies have drawn thousands of protesters, who carry no signs and walk silently through the streets clapping in unison.

In photos: Belarus Independence Day marked with military parade in Minsk:

Belarus blocks Twitter and Facebook in bid to prevent protests
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  • Belarus Independence Day

    Belarusian troops march during a parade marking Independence Day in Minsk, Belarus, today, the day when Minsk was liberated by the Red Army from the Nazi invaders in 1944. (AP Photo/Sergei Grits)
  • Belarus Independence Day

    Belarusian army self-propelled cannons are seen during the Independence Day parade in Minsk. (AP Photo/Sergei Grits)
  • Belarus Independence Day

    Belarusian army jet fighters fly during a parade marking Independence Day in Minsk, Belarus, today. (AP Photo/Sergei Grits)
  • Belarus Independence Day

    Belarusian army tanks drive during today's parade in Minsk marking Independence Day. (AP Photo/Sergei Grits)
  • Belarus Independence Day

    Belarusian sportspeople perform during today's celebrations in Minsk. (AP Photo/Sergei Grits)

Eager to avoid protests on the national holiday, the government on Saturday began blocking access to the social media sites, including VKontakte, a Russian version of Facebook.

The opposition group appealed to Russian authorities on Sunday to respond to the Belarusian government’s interference, activist Vyacheslav Dianov said.

Shushkevich returned to Minsk on Sunday after he and about 20 students were taken off a train from Vilnius, Lithuania, and held overnight. Shushkevich, who had met with U.S. Secretary of State Hillary Rodham Clinton while in Vilnius, said he and the students were released with a warning not to take part in protests Sunday.

It was unclear whether protests would be held Sunday evening and if so where, given that activists were unable to communicate by Internet and the center of Minsk was essentially blocked off by police.

- AP

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