Belarus opposition candidate held
Belarus opposition candidate held
Prosecutors said Kozulin was under investigation for "hooliganism," which is punishable by up to 15 days in prison.

Minsk: An opposition leader in Belarus was detained for several hours on Thursday after he attempted to confront the nation's hardline President Alexander Lukashenko at a political convention in Minsk, police said.

Alexander Kozulin, leader of the Social Democratic party and one of four candidates in a presidential election slated for March 19, said he was held in a police station and released later on Thursday.

Witnesses said Kozulin, a former dean of Minsk university, was beaten up after organisers refused to register him when he arrived at the Congress of People's Deputies demanding to be let in.

Prosecutors said Kozulin was under investigation for "hooliganism," which is punishable by up to 15 days in prison, and that he could incur an additional penalty for smashing a portrait of Lukashenko.

The detention set off alarm bells in Western capitals ahead of the forthcoming presidential election.

The US administration urged the country's hardline regime to allow free elections or face consequences.

"We have indicated to them that should there be incidents like there were today, there will be consequences," David Kramer, deputy assistant secretary of state for European and Eurasian affairs, said.

"We are paying very close attention to those who are involved in activities that promote either fraudulent elections or promote violence," added Kramer, who was in Minsk last week to meet with government officials as well as members of the opposition ahead of the elections.

In Vienna the Organisation for Security and Cooperation in Europe (OSCE), which plans to monitor the presidential election, also denounced the detention and demanded an explanation from the Minsk authorities.

"This marks a serious deterioration in the campaign atmosphere," it said in a statement.

In Brussels the European Union described the detention as a "serious development".

Kozulin has strongly denounced Lukashenko as the heated election campaign gets under way in the former Soviet republic, where almost all opposition media have been shut down.

During a television broadcast, he ripped up an issue of the pro-government Sovetskaya Belarus newspaper devoted entirely to Lukashenko.

At the convention centre, Lukashenko -- whose regime has been described by US Secretary of State Condoleezza Rice as "the last dictatorship in the center of Europe" -- railed against what he called outside interference.

"If we give up our country without fighting, our descendants will never forgive us," said Lukashenko, who is widely favoured to win the election.

He vowed to put down any attempts at an "orange revolution" similar to the popular street demonstrations that brought pro-Western President Viktor Yushchenko to power in neighbouring Ukraine.

In front of 2,000 people, including many government officials and military personnel, Lukashenko accused the United States and the European Union of financing the opposition.

"They don't have any lessons to teach us in terms of human rights. They've covered the Middle East, Afghanistan, Iraq, Yugoslavia in blood. People are dying in their millions," Lukashenko said.

"They say: we're going to democratise Belarus. Democratise yourselves first!" said Lukashenko, who organised a controversial referendum in 2004 to enable him to be re-elected in perpetuity.

Belarus television has been showing images of buildings and cars supposedly torched during popular revolts in the former Soviet states of Georgia and Ukraine in 2003 and 2004 on an almost daily basis.

The main candidate from the Belarussian opposition, Alexander Milinkevich, held a rally in central Minsk later Thursday despite a ban.

The fourth candidate in the election is Liberal Democratic leader Sergei Gaidukevich.

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