There’s ‘bring your child to work day’ in Belarus too it seems, although the country’s leader may have taken it a tad too far.
Belarussian dictator Alexander Lukashenko has been head honcho for 21 years, ruling with an iron fist and instilling fear in the hearts of all who oppose him. His tactics include ‘jailing opponents, crushing opposition marches, and, many believe, sanctioning the murder of rivals’.
Charming man that Alexander, and now he is grooming his 11-year-old son to follow in father’s footsteps. The Telegraph reports:
The grooming of “Kolya,” as he is popularly known, began in 2008, when the four-year old child appeared alongside his father in military uniform to review an annual Independence Day parade in Minsk.
Since then he has emerged as Belarus’ president-in-waiting, accompanying his father on high-level diplomatic missions where foreign leaders have been obliged to treat the young boy as an official guest.
By the time he was seven years old, he had met Pope Benedict XVI, the former president of Venezuela, Hugo Chavez, and the then-president of Russia, Dmitry Medvedev, who gave him a golden pistol.
A golden bloody pistol as a gift, how very dictatorial of you. But wait, it gets even better:
He has presided over military parades in a replica of his father’s own uniform, and been photographed around major military exercises with the golden sidearm in the belt of his camouflage uniform.
When Kolya he high-fived Hugo Chavez in 2012, his suit jacket slipped back to reveal a holstered pistol on his belt.
Get in on the action Barack, everyone’s doing it.
It’s all a bit odd when you consider that the Belarussian constitution sets the minimum age for a president at 35, which is a full 24 years away. You might say it’s the work shadow project that never ends, although Lukashenko may have ulterior motives:
“Dynastic succession is a long-term possibility. But Kolya is also very young, and that is very deliberate: it sends the message; ‘I may be grooming my son for power, but you won’t be rid of me any time soon,” said Andrew Wilson, a senior policy fellow at the European Council for Foreign Relations and an expert on post-Soviet politics.
Ah yes, the classic ‘you’re stuck with me and you better play ball’ show of strength. Good luck Belarus, here’s hoping you get some good news like this in the near future.
[source:telegraph]
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