Lukashenko admits he and Putin are 'the most toxic people' on Earth
Belarus dictator Lukashenko makes startling admission he and Putin are ‘the most harmful, toxic people on this planet’ and ‘co-aggressors’ in front of uncomfortable-looking Vladimir
- Belarus leader Alexander Lukashenko held a summit with Putin yesterday
- There is ongoing speculation Russia leader will force him to join Ukraine war
- Both leaders lock up, torture, humiliate or force their political enemies into exile
Belarus leader Alexander Lukashenko has admitted he and Vladimir Putin are the ‘most toxic people on this planet’.
The pair held a summit yesterday amid speculation that the Kremlin leader will force the Minsk tyrant to join his war in Ukraine.
Until now Lukashenko has resisted being part of the war.
But in a video clip that could be useful later to war crimes investigators, Lukashenko painted himself and Putin as evil pantomime villains.
Belarus leader Alexander Lukashenko has admitted he and Vladimir Putin are the ‘most toxic people on this planet’
‘You know, the two of us are co-aggressors,’ he confessed.
‘The most harmful [and] toxic people on this planet. We have only one dispute – who is more [toxic]?
‘Vladimir Vladimirovich [Putin] says that I am. I am already starting to think that he is.’
Lukashenko told journalists: ‘Well, [we] decided that we both are [equally toxic]. That’s all.
The pair held a summit yesterday amid speculation that the Kremlin leader will force the Minsk tyrant to join his war in Ukraine
Putin smiled and fidgeted with his papers but appeared to agree with the remarks by Lukashenko, a former collective farm boss
‘And if someone today thinks of tearing us [apart], of forcing us apart….[they will not].’
Putin smiled and fidgeted with his papers but appeared to agree with the remarks by Lukashenko, a former collective farm boss.
Both leaders use their secret services to torture and humiliate political foes, according to human rights groups and opposition politicians.
Their political enemies are mostly locked up or have been forced into exile.
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