Difference between revisions of "Belarus" - New World Encyclopedia

From New World Encyclopedia
(thru demo)
 
(91 intermediate revisions by 7 users not shown)
Line 1: Line 1:
{{Ready}} {{Images OK}}
+
{{Ebcompleted}}{{2Copyedited}}{{Ready}} {{Images OK}}{{Submitted}}{{Approved}}{{Copyedited}}
 +
 
  
 
{{Infobox Country
 
{{Infobox Country
Line 10: Line 11:
 
|map_caption = {{map_caption |region=[[Europe]] |legend=European location legend en.png}}
 
|map_caption = {{map_caption |region=[[Europe]] |legend=European location legend en.png}}
 
|national_anthem = Мы, беларусы{{spaces|2}}<small>([[Belarusian language|Belarusian]])</small><br />''[[My Belarusy|My, Belarusy]]''{{spaces|2}}<small>([[transliteration]])<br />''We Belarusians''</small>
 
|national_anthem = Мы, беларусы{{spaces|2}}<small>([[Belarusian language|Belarusian]])</small><br />''[[My Belarusy|My, Belarusy]]''{{spaces|2}}<small>([[transliteration]])<br />''We Belarusians''</small>
|official_languages = [[Belarusian language|Belarusian]], [[Russian language|Russian]]
+
|official_languages = [[Belarusian language|Belarusian]]<br />[[Russian language|Russian]]
|demonym = [[Belarusians|Belarusian]], Belarussian
+
|demonym = [[Belarusians|Belarusian]]
 
|capital = [[Minsk]]
 
|capital = [[Minsk]]
|latd=53 |latm=55 |latNS=N |longd=27 |longm=33 |longEW=E
+
|latd=53
 +
|latm=55
 +
|latNS=N
 +
|longd=27
 +
|longm=33
 +
|longEW=E
 
|largest_city = capital
 
|largest_city = capital
 
|government_type = [[Presidential republic]]
 
|government_type = [[Presidential republic]]
Line 19: Line 25:
 
|leader_name1 = [[Alexander Lukashenko]]
 
|leader_name1 = [[Alexander Lukashenko]]
 
|leader_title2 = [[List of Belarusian Prime Ministers|Prime Minister]]
 
|leader_title2 = [[List of Belarusian Prime Ministers|Prime Minister]]
|leader_name2 = [[Sergey Sidorsky]]
+
|leader_name2 = [[Mikhail Myasnikovich]]
 
|sovereignty_type = [[Independence]]
 
|sovereignty_type = [[Independence]]
 
|sovereignty_note = from the [[Soviet Union]]
 
|sovereignty_note = from the [[Soviet Union]]
 
|established_event1 = Declared
 
|established_event1 = Declared
|established_date1 = July 27 1990
+
|established_date1 = 27 July 1990
 
|established_event2 = Established
 
|established_event2 = Established
|established_date2 = August 25 1991
+
|established_date2 = 25 August 1991
 
|established_event3 = Completed
 
|established_event3 = Completed
|established_date3 = December 25 1991
+
|established_date3 = 25 December 1991
|area_km2 = 207600
+
|area_km2 = 207595
 
|area_sq_mi = 80155 <!--Do not remove [[WP:MOSNUM]]—>
 
|area_sq_mi = 80155 <!--Do not remove [[WP:MOSNUM]]—>
 
|area_rank = 85th
 
|area_rank = 85th
 
|area_magnitude = 1 E11
 
|area_magnitude = 1 E11
|percent_water = negligible (2.830 km²)<sup>1</sup>
+
|percent_water = negligible (2.830&nbsp;km<sup>2</sup>)<sup>1</sup>
|population_estimate = 9,689,800<ref>[http://belstat.gov.by/homep/ru/news/press_%20conference/press-conference.doc The Ministry of Statistics and Analysis of the Republic of Belarus]</ref>
+
|population_estimate =  
|population_estimate_year = 2008
+
|population_estimate_year =
|population_estimate_rank = 86th
+
|population_census_rank = 86th
|population_census = 10,045,200
+
|population_census = 9,503,807
|population_census_year = 1999
+
|population_census_year = 2009
|population_density_km2 = 49
+
|population_density_km2 = 45.8
|population_density_sq_mi = 127 <!--Do not remove [[WP:MOSNUM]]—>
+
|population_density_sq_mi = 120.8 <!--Do not remove [[WP:MOSNUM]]—>
 
|population_density_rank = 142nd
 
|population_density_rank = 142nd
|GDP_PPP = $115,027 billion
+
|GDP_PPP = $131.201&nbsp;billion<ref name=imf2>{{cite web|title=Belarus|publisher=International Monetary Fund}}</ref>
|GDP_PPP_rank = 58th
+
|GDP_PPP_rank =
|GDP_PPP_year = 2008
+
|GDP_PPP_year = 2010
|GDP_PPP_per_capita = $11,991
+
|GDP_PPP_per_capita = $13,909<ref name=imf2/>
|GDP_PPP_per_capita_rank = 65th
+
|GDP_PPP_per_capita_rank =
|Gini = 29.7
+
|GDP_nominal_year = 2010
|Gini_year = 2002
+
|GDP_nominal = $54.713&nbsp;billion<ref name=imf2/>
|Gini_category = <font color="#009900">low</font>
+
|GDP_nominal_rank =
|HDI_year = 2005
+
|GDP_nominal_per_capita = $5,800<ref name=imf2/>
|HDI = {{increase}} 0.804
+
|GDP_nominal_per_capita_rank =
|HDI_rank = 64th
+
|Gini = 27.9<ref>{{cite web|title=Distribution of family income&nbsp;– Gini index|work=The World Factbook|publisher=CIA}}</ref>
|HDI_category = <font color="#009900">high</font>
+
|Gini_year = 2005
|currency = [[Belarusian rouble|rouble]]
+
|Gini_category = <span style="color:#090;">low</span>
 +
|HDI_year = 2010
 +
|HDI = {{increase}} 0.732<ref name="HDI">{{cite web|url=http://hdr.undp.org/en/media/HDR_2010_EN_Table1.pdf|title=Human Development Report 2010|year=2010|publisher=United Nations|accessdate=5 November 2010}}</ref>
 +
|HDI_rank = 61st
 +
|HDI_category = <span style="color:#090;">high</span>
 +
|currency = [[Belarusian ruble]]
 
|currency_code = BYR
 
|currency_code = BYR
 
|time_zone = [[Eastern European Time|EET]]
 
|time_zone = [[Eastern European Time|EET]]
Line 59: Line 70:
 
|time_zone_DST = [[Eastern European Summer Time|EEST]]
 
|time_zone_DST = [[Eastern European Summer Time|EEST]]
 
|utc_offset_DST = +3
 
|utc_offset_DST = +3
 +
|ethnic_groups = '''83.7% [[Belarusians]]''',<br> 8.3% [[Russians in Belarus|Russians]],<br> 3.1% [[Poles in Belarus|Poles]],<br> 1.7% [[Ukrainians]], 4.2% others and unspecified
 +
|ethnic_groups_year = 2009
 +
|drives_on = right
 
|cctld = [[.by]]
 
|cctld = [[.by]]
|calling_code = 375
+
|calling_code = [[+375|375]]
|footnote1 = {{cite web |url=http://www.fao.org/nr/water/aquastat/countries/belarus/index.stm |publisher=FAO |title=FAO's Information System on Water and Agriculture |accessdate=2008-04-04}}
+
|footnote1 = {{cite web |url=http://www.fao.org/nr/water/aquastat/countries/belarus/index.stm |publisher=FAO |title=FAO's Information System on Water and Agriculture |accessdate=4 April 2008}}
 
}}
 
}}
  
'''Belarus''' ([[Belarusian language|Belarusian]] and [[Russian language|Russian]]: Беларусь, [[BGN/PCGN romanization of Belarusian|transliteration]]: ''Byelarus’'', [[Polish language|Polish]]: ''Białoruś'', is a [[landlocked country]] in [[Eastern Europe]], that borders [[Russia]] to the north and east, [[Ukraine]] to the south, [[Poland]] to the west, and [[Lithuania]] and [[Latvia]] to the north. Its capital is [[Minsk]]; other major cities include [[Brest, Belarus|Brest]], [[Hrodna|Grodno]], [[Homyel|Gomel]], [[Mogilev]] and [[Vitebsk]]. A third of the country is forested, and its strongest economic sectors are agriculture and manufacturing.
 
  
Until the 20th century, the [[Belarusians]] lacked the opportunity to create a distinctive national identity, since the lands of modern-day Belarus belonged to several countries, including the [[Duchy of Polatsk]], the [[Grand Duchy of Lithuania]], the [[Polish-Lithuanian Commonwealth]], and the [[Russian Empire]]. After the short-lived [[Belarusian People's Republic]] (1918–19), Belarus became a [[Republics of the Soviet Union|constituent republic of the Soviet Union]], the [[Byelorussian SSR]].
+
'''Belarus''' ([[Belarusian language|Belarusian]] and [[Russian language|Russian]]: Беларусь, [[BGN/PCGN romanization of Belarusian|transliteration]]: ''Byelarus’'', [[Polish language|Polish]]: ''Białoruś'') is a landlocked country in [[Eastern Europe]] that borders [[Russia]] to the north and east, [[Ukraine]] to the south, [[Poland]] to the west, and [[Lithuania]] and [[Latvia]] to the north. Its capital is [[Minsk]]; other major cities include [[Brest, Belarus|Brest]], [[Hrodna|Grodno]], [[Homyel|Gomel]], [[Mogilev]] and [[Vitebsk]]. A third of the country is [[forest]]ed, and its strongest economic sectors are [[agriculture]] and [[manufacturing]].
  
The final unification of Belarusian lands within its modern borders took place in 1939, when the ethnically Belarusian lands that were part of [[Second Polish Republic|interwar Poland]] were annexed by the USSR and attached to the Soviet Belarus. The territory and its nation were devastated in [[World War II]], during which Belarus lost about a third of its population and more than half of its economic resources;<ref name="axell">{{cite book | last = Axell | first = Albert | authorlink = | coauthors = | title = Russia's Heroes, 1941–45 | publisher = Carroll & Graf Publishers | date= 2002 | location = | pages = 247 | url = | doi = | id = | isbn = 078671011X }}</ref> the republic recovered<!--"recovered" sounds too cut-and-dried: it remained economically impoverished under the Soviet system, yes? The combining of both this and the UN idea in the one sentence makes it seem as though there's causality: one begot the other. Also, it sounds too much as though B. was independent, rather than a client Russian sattelite.—> in the post-war years and became one of the founding members of the [[United Nations]]. The parliament of the republic declared the sovereignty of Belarus on July 27, 1990, and following the [[History of the Soviet Union (1985–1991)|collapse of the Soviet Union]], Belarus declared independence on August 25, 1991. [[Alexander Lukashenko]] has been the country's president since 1994. During his presidency, Lukashenko has implemented<!--retained?—> Soviet-era policies, such as state ownership of the economy, despite objections from Western governments. Since 1996, Belarus has been negotiating with Russia to unify into a single state called the [[Union of Russia and Belarus]].
+
The history of Belarus is a story of domination by foreign powers, forced division and re-unification of the land, devastation during war and authoritarian rule following its 1991 independence.
  
Most of Belarus's population of 9.85 million reside in the urban areas surrounding Minsk and other [[oblast]] (regional) capitals.<ref> {{cite web|url=http://un.by/en/aboutbelarus/population/ |title=About Belarus - Population |accessdate=2007-10-07 |date=2003 |publisher=United Nations Office in Belarus }}</ref> More than 80% of the population are native Belarusians, with sizable minorities of Russians, Ukrainians and Poles. Since a referendum in 1995, the country has had two official languages: [[Belarusian language|Belarusian]] and [[Russian language|Russian]]. The [[Constitution of Belarus]] does not declare an official religion, although the primary religion in the country is [[Russian Orthodox Church|Russian Orthodox]].
+
The final unification of Belarusian lands within its modern borders took place in 1939, when the ethnically Belarusian lands that were part of interwar Poland were annexed by the USSR and attached to the Soviet Belarus. The territory and its nation were devastated in [[World War II]], during which Belarus lost about a third of its population and more than half of its economic resources. After seven decades as a constituent republic of the USSR, Belarus declared its sovereignty on July 27, 1990, and independence from the Soviet Union on August 25, 1991. It has retained closer political and economic ties to Russia than any of the other former Soviet republics.
 +
{{toc}}
 +
Its president since 1994, [[Alexander Lukashenko]], has retained Soviet-era policies, such as state ownership of the economy, despite objections from Western governments. Government restrictions on [[freedom of speech]], [[freedom of the press|press]] and [[freedom of religion|religion]], as well as of [[peaceful assembly]], continue into the twenty-first century. Because of its failure to protect labor rights, Belarus lost its [[European Union]] Generalized System of Preferences status in June 2007. It has been cited as a country of concern by both [[Amnesty International]] and [[Human Rights Watch]].
  
 
== Etymology ==
 
== Etymology ==
The name ''Belarus'' derives from the term ''[[White Russia]]'', which first appeared in German and Latin [[medieval]] [[literature]]. The Latin term for the area was ''Russia Alba''. Historically, the country was referred to in [[English language|English]] as ''White Russia''. Some sources translate the term as ''White Ruthenia'', which either describes the area of Eastern Europe populated by Slavic people or the states that occupied the area. The first known use of ''White Russia'' to refer to Belarus was in the late-16th century by Englishman Sir [[Jerome Horsey]]. During the 17th century, Russian [[tsar]]s used ''White Rus''', asserting that they were trying to recapture their heritage from the [[Polish-Lithuanian Commonwealth]].  
+
The name ''Belarus'' derives from the term ''[[White Russia]],'' which first appeared in [[German language|German]] and [[Latin]] [[medieval]] [[literature]]. The Latin term for the area was ''Russia Alba.'' Historically, the country was referred to in [[English language|English]] as ''White Russia.'' Some sources translate the term as ''White Ruthenia,'' which can be used to describe either the area of [[Eastern Europe]] populated by Slavic people or the states that occupied the area. The first known use of ''White Russia'' to refer to Belarus was in the late-sixteenth century by Englishman Sir [[Jerome Horsey]]. During the seventeenth century, Russian [[tsar]]s used ''White Rus''', asserting that they were trying to recapture their heritage from the [[Polish-Lithuanian Commonwealth]].
 +
 
 +
Belarus was named ''Belorussia'' ([[Russian language|Russian]]: Белоруссия) in the days of [[Imperial Russia]], and the Russian tsar was usually styled ''Tsar of All the Russias—Great, Little, and White.'' ''Belorussia'' was the only Russian language name of the country until 1991, when the [[Supreme Soviet]] of the [[Belorussian Soviet Socialist Republic]] decreed by law that the new independent republic should be called ''Belarus'' (Беларусь) in Russian and in all other language transcriptions of that name. The change was made to reflect adequately the [[Belarusian language]] form of the name.<ref>''Pravo - Law of the Republic of Belarus.'' [http://pravo.kulichki.com/zak/year1991/doc47159.htm Law of the Republic of Belarus] (in Russian) Retrieved July 9, 2008.</ref> Accordingly, the name ''Belorussia'' was replaced by ''Belarus'' in English, and, to some extent, in Russian, although the traditional name still persists in that language as well.
 +
 
 +
==Geography==
 +
[[Image:Belarus-Vaskowskae Reservoir.jpg|thumb|left|350px|Vaskowskae reservoir]]
 +
The country of Belarus covers 80,100 square miles (207,600 sq km), slightly smaller than the [[U.S.]] state of [[Kansas]]. It is landlocked, relatively flat, and contains large tracts of [[marsh]]y land. According to a 1994 estimate by the [[United Nations Food and Agricultural Organization]], 34 percent of Belarus was at that time covered by [[forest]]s. Many streams and 11,000 [[lake]]s are found in Belarus. Three major [[river]]s run through the country: the [[Neman River|Neman]], the [[Pripyat River|Pripyat]], and the [[Dnepr River|Dnepr]]. The Neman flows westward toward the [[Baltic Sea]] and the Pripyat flows eastward to the Dnepr; the Dnepr flows southward towards the [[Black Sea]]. Belarus's highest point is [[Dzyarzhynskaya Hara]] (Dzyarzhynsk Hill) at 1132 feet (345 meters), and its lowest point is on the Neman River at 295 feet (90 meters).
 +
 
 +
The climate ranges from harsh [[winter]]s, with average January temperatures at {{convert|-6|°C|°F|lk=on}}, to cool and moist [[summer]]s with an average [[temperature]] of {{convert|18|°C|°F}}. Belarus has an average annual [[rain]]fall of 21.7 to 27.5 inches (550 to 700 mm). The country experiences a yearly transition from a [[continental climate]] to a [[maritime climate]].
 +
 +
[[Image:Poland Bialowieza - BPN.jpg|250px|thumb|Białowieża National Park]]
 +
 
 +
Belarus's [[natural resource]]s include [[peat]] deposits, small quantities of [[oil]] and [[natural gas]], [[granite]], dolomite ([[limestone]]), [[marl]], [[chalk]], [[sand]], [[gravel]], and [[clay]].  
  
Belarus was named ''Belorussia'' ([[Russian language|Russian]]: Белоруссия) in the days of [[Imperial Russia]], and the Russian tsar was usually styled ''Tsar of All the Russias—Great, Little, and White''. ''Belorussia'' was the only Russian language name of the country until 1991, when the [[Supreme Soviet]] of the [[Belorussian Soviet Socialist Republic]] decreed by law that the new independent republic should be called ''Belarus'' (Беларусь) in Russian and in all other language transcriptions of its name. The change was made to reflect adequately the [[Belarusian language]] form of the name.<ref> {{cite web|url=http://pravo.kulichki.com/zak/year1991/doc47159.htm |title=Law of the Republic of Belarus - About the name of the Republic of Belarus |accessdate=2007-10-06 |date=1991-09-19 |publisher=Pravo - Law of the Republic of Belarus |language=Russian }}</ref> Accordingly, the name ''Belorussia'' was replaced by ''Belarus'' in English, and, to some extent, in Russian, although the traditional name still persists in that language as well. To some, ''Belorussia'' is an unhappy reminder of the days under Russian and Soviet rule.  
+
Approximately 70 percent of the [[radiation]] from neighboring Ukraine's 1986 [[Chernobyl disaster|Chernobyl nuclear disaster]] entered Belarusian territory, and as of 2005 about a fifth of Belarusian land (principally farmland and forests in the southeastern provinces) continued to be affected by radiation fallout.<ref name="Chernobyl">Sarah Rainsford. April 26, 2005. [http://news.bbc.co.uk/2/hi/europe/4485003.stm Belarus cursed by Chernobyl] ''BBC News''. Retrieved July 9, 2008. </ref> The [[United Nations]] and other agencies have aimed to reduce the level of radiation in affected areas, especially through the use of caesium binders and [[rapeseed]] cultivation, which are meant to decrease soil levels of [[caesium-137]]. <ref name="uncher">''UN Office for the Coordination of Humanitarian Affairs''. 2004. The United Nations and Chernobyl - The Republic of Belarus.</ref><ref>Marilyn Smith. [http://tc.iaea.org/tcweb/news_archive/Chernobyl/ecoreserve/default.asp Ecological reservation in Belarus fosters new approaches to soil remediation] ''International Atomic Energy Agency''. Retrieved July 9, 2008.</ref>
 +
 
 +
Belarus is bordered by [[Latvia]] on the north, [[Lithuania]] to the northwest, [[Poland]] to the west, [[Russia]] to the north and east and [[Ukraine]] to the south. Treaties in 1995 and 1996 demarcated Belarus's borders with Latvia and Lithuania, but Belarus failed to ratify a 1997 treaty establishing the Belarus-Ukraine border. Belarus and Lithuania ratified final border demarcation documents in February 2007.<ref>''Lithuanian Ministry of Foreign Affairs.'' [http://www.urm.lt/index.php?-1507529950 Lithuania's Cooperation with Belarus] Retrieved July 9, 2008. </ref>
 +
 
 +
Belarus has four [[World Heritage Site]]s: the [[Mir Castle Complex]], the [[Niasvizh Castle]], the [[Białowieża Forest]] (shared with [[Poland]]), and the [[Struve Geodetic Arc]] (shared with nine other countries).<ref name="UNSECO">''UNESCO World Heritage Centre''. [http://whc.unesco.org/en/statesparties/by| Belarus] Retrieved July 10, 2008. </ref> While three of these are cultural sites, the Białowieża Forest is an ancient woodland straddling the border between Belarus and Poland. It is the only remaining part of the immense [[forest]] which once spread across the European Plain.
  
 
== History ==
 
== History ==
[[Image:Mir Castle Radziwills.jpg|thumb|left|The [[Mir Castle Complex|Mir Castle]] near [[Minsk]], built in the 15th century]]
 
 
[[Image:Rzeczpospolita2nar.png|thumb|left|Map of the [[Grand Duchy of Lithuania]] and the [[Kingdom of Poland (1385–1569)|Kingdom of Poland]] in the [[Polish-Lithuanian Commonwealth]], 1619]]
 
[[Image:Rzeczpospolita2nar.png|thumb|left|Map of the [[Grand Duchy of Lithuania]] and the [[Kingdom of Poland (1385–1569)|Kingdom of Poland]] in the [[Polish-Lithuanian Commonwealth]], 1619]]
 +
While [[archaeology|archaeological]] evidence points to settlement in today's Belarus at least ten thousand years ago, recorded history begins with settlement by Baltic and Slavic tribes in the sixth century. They gradually came into contact with the [[Varangians]], a band of warriors consisting of [[Scandinavia]]ns and Slavs from the [[Baltic region|Baltics]]. Though defeated and briefly exiled by the local population, the Varangians were later asked to return and helped to form a polity—commonly referred to as the [[Kievan Rus']]—in exchange for tribute. The Kievan Rus' state began in about 862 at the present-day city of [[Novgorod]].<ref>''The foreign quarterly review.'' 1827. (London: Treuttel and Würtz, Treuttel, Jun, and Richter).</ref>
  
The region that is now modern-day Belarus was first settled by [[Slavic peoples|Slavic]] tribes in the 6th century. They gradually came into contact with the [[Varangians]], a band of warriors consisting of [[Scandinavia]]ns and Slavs from the [[Baltic region|Baltics]]. Though defeated and briefly exiled by the local population, the Varangians were later asked to return and helped to form a polity—commonly referred to as the [[Kievan Rus']]—in exchange for tribute. The Kievan Rus' state began in about 862 at the present-day city of [[Novgorod]]. <ref>{{cite book | last = Treuttel | first = | authorlink = | coauthors = Various | title = The Foreign Quarterly Review | publisher = Jemia Mason | date= 1841 | location = New York, New York | pages = 38 | url = | doi = | id = | isbn = }}</ref>
+
Upon the death of Kievan Rus' ruler, [[Prince Yaroslav the Wise]], (r. 1019 to 1054) the state split into independent principalities. These Ruthenian principalities were badly affected by a [[Mongol]] invasion in the thirteenth century, and many were later incorporated into the [[Grand Duchy of Lithuania]]. Of the principalities held by the Duchy, nine were settled by ancestors of the Belarusian people. During this time, the Duchy was involved in several military campaigns, including fighting on the side of [[Poland]] against the [[Teutonic Knights]] at the [[Battle of Grunwald]] in 1410; the joint victory allowed the Duchy to control the northwestern border lands of [[Eastern Europe]].  
  
Upon the death of Kievan Rus' ruler, [[Prince Yaroslav the Wise]], the state split into independent principalities. These Ruthenian principalities were badly affected by a Mongol invasion in the 13th century, and many were later incorporated into the [[Grand Duchy of Lithuania]]. Of the principalities held by the Duchy, nine were settled by ancestors of the Belarusian people. During this time, the Duchy was involved in several military campaigns, including fighting on the side of Poland against the [[Teutonic Knights]] at the [[Battle of Grunwald]] in 1410; the joint victory allowed the Duchy to control the northwestern border lands of Eastern Europe.  
+
On February 2, 1386, the Grand Duchy of Lithuania and the [[Kingdom of Poland (1385–1569)|Kingdom of Poland]] were joined in a [[personal union]] through a marriage of their rulers. This union set in motion the developments that eventually resulted in the formation of the [[Polish-Lithuanian Commonwealth]], created in 1569. The Russians, led by Tsar [[Ivan III of Russia|Ivan the III]], began military conquests in 1486 in an attempt to gain the Kievan Rus' lands, specifically Belarus and [[Ukraine]]. The union between Poland and Lithuania ended in 1795, and the commonwealth was partitioned by [[Imperial Russia]], [[Prussia]], and [[Austria]], dividing Belarus. Belarusian territories were acquired by the [[Russian Empire]] during the reign of [[Catherine II of Russia|Catherine II]]  and held until their occupation by [[Imperial Germany|Germany]] during [[World War I]].
 +
[[Image:History of Russia, XVIII c.jpg|thumb|Map of the [[Russian Empire]], 1762–1801]]
 +
During the negotiations of the [[Treaty of Brest-Litovsk]], Belarus first declared independence on March 25, 1918, forming the Belarusian People's Republic. The Germans supported the BPR, which lasted for about ten months. Soon after the Germans were defeated, the BPR fell under the influence of the Bolsheviks and the [[Red Army]] and became the [[Byelorussian SSR|Byelorussian Soviet Socialist Republic]] in 1919. After Russian occupation of eastern and northern Lithuania, it was merged into the [[Lithuanian-Byelorussian Soviet Socialist Republic]]. Byelorussian lands were then split between [[Poland]] and the [[Soviet Union|Soviet]]s after the [[Polish-Soviet War]] ended in 1921, and the recreated Byelorussian SSR became a founding member of the [[Soviet Union|Union of Soviet Socialist Republics]] in 1922.  
  
On February 2, 1386, the Grand Duchy of Lithuania and the [[Kingdom of Poland (1385–1569)|Kingdom of Poland]] were joined in a [[personal union]] through a [[Act of Kreva|marriage of their rulers]].  This union set in motion the developments that eventually resulted in the formation of the [[Polish-Lithuanian Commonwealth]], [[Union of Lublin|created in 1569]]. The [[Grand Duchy of Moscow|Russians]], led by Tsar [[Ivan III of Russia|Ivan the III]], began military conquests in 1486 in an attempt to gain the Kievan Rus' lands, specifically Belarus and Ukraine.  The union between Poland and Lithuania ended in 1795, and the commonwealth was [[partitions of Poland|partitioned]] by [[Imperial Russia]], [[Prussia]], and [[Austria]], dividing Belarus. Belarusian territories were acquired by the [[Russian Empire]] during the reign of [[Catherine II of Russia|Catherine II]]  and held until their occupation by [[Imperial Germany|Germany]] during [[World War I]].  
+
In September 1939, as a result of the [[Molotov-Ribbentrop Pact]], the Soviet Union invaded Poland and annexed its eastern lands, including most Polish-held Byelorussian land. [[Nazi Germany]] invaded the Soviet Union in 1941. Byelorussia was the hardest hit Soviet Republic in the war and remained in [[Nazi]] hands until 1944. During that time, Germany destroyed 209 out of 290 cities in the republic, 85 percent of the republic's industry, and more than one million buildings, while causing human losses estimated between two and three million (about a quarter to one-third of the total population). The Jewish population of Byelorussia was devastated during the [[Holocaust]] and never recovered.  
[[Image:History of Russia, XVIII c.jpg|thumb|Map of the [[Russian Empire]], 1762–1801]]
 
During the negotiations of the [[Treaty of Brest-Litovsk]], Belarus first declared independence on 25 March 1918, forming the [[Belarusian National Republic|Belarusian People's Republic]]. The Germans supported the BPR, which lasted for about 10 months.  Soon after the Germans were defeated, the BPR fell under the influence of the Bolsheviks and the Red Army and became the [[Byelorussian SSR|Byelorussian Soviet Socialist Republic]] in 1919. After Russian occupation of eastern and northern Lithuania, it was merged into the [[Lithuanian-Byelorussian Soviet Socialist Republic]]. Byelorussian lands were then split between Poland and the [[Soviet]]s after the [[Polish-Soviet War]] ended in 1921, and the recreated Byelorussian SSR became a founding member of the [[Soviet Union|Union of Soviet Socialist Republics]] in 1922.  
 
  
In September 1939, as a result of the [[Molotov-Ribbentrop Pact]], the [[Soviet invasion of Poland (1939)|Soviet Union invaded Poland]] and [[Polish areas annexed by the Soviet Union|annexed its eastern lands]], including most Polish-held Byelorussian land.  [[Nazi Germany]] [[Operation Barbarossa|invaded the Soviet Union]] in 1941. Byelorussia was the hardest hit Soviet Republic in the war and [[Occupation of Belarus by Nazi Germany|remained in Nazi hands]] until 1944. During that time, Germany destroyed 209 out of 290 cities in the republic, 85% of the republic's industry, and more than one million buildings, while causing human losses  estimated between two and three million (about a quarter to one-third of the total population).  The [[History of the Jews in Belarus|Jewish population of Byelorussia]] was devastated during [[The Holocaust]] and never recovered. The population of Belarus did not regain its pre-war level until 1971. After the war ended, Byelorussia was among the 51 founding countries of the [[United Nations Charter]] in 1945 and began rebuilding the Soviet Republic. During this time, the Byelorussian SSR became a major center of manufacturing in the western region of the USSR, increasing jobs and bringing an influx of ethnic [[Russians]] into the republic. The borders of Byelorussian SSR and Poland were redrawn to a point known as the [[Curzon Line]].  
+
The population of Belarus did not regain its pre-war level until 1971. After the war ended, Byelorussia was among the 51 founding countries of the [[United Nations Charter]] in 1945 and began rebuilding the Soviet Republic. During this time, the Byelorussian SSR became a major center of [[manufacturing]] in the western region of the USSR, increasing jobs and bringing an influx of ethnic Russians into the republic. The borders of Byelorussian SSR and Poland were redrawn to a point known as the [[Curzon Line]].  
 
[[Image:Belorussian SSR 1940.jpg|thumb|left|Map of the [[Byelorussian SSR]], 1940]]
 
[[Image:Belorussian SSR 1940.jpg|thumb|left|Map of the [[Byelorussian SSR]], 1940]]
  
[[Joseph Stalin]] implemented a policy of [[Sovietization]] to isolate the Byelorussian SSR from [[Western world|Western influences]].  <!--The plan was to have any trace of Belarus's cultural identity to be replaced by those of Russia.—> This policy involved sending Russians from various parts of the Soviet Union and placing them in key positions in the Byelorussian SSR government. The official use of the [[Belarusian language]] and other cultural aspects were limited by [[Politics of the Soviet Union|Moscow]]. After Stalin died in 1953, successor [[Nikita Khrushchev]] continued this program, stating, "The sooner we all start speaking [[Russian language|Russian]], the faster we shall build [[communism]]". When Soviet leader [[Mikhail Gorbachev]] began pushing through his [[Perestroika|reform plan]], the Belarusian people delivered a petition to him in December 1986 explaining the loss of [[culture of Belarus|their culture]]. Earlier that year, Byelorussian SSR was exposed to [[nuclear fallout]] from the explosion at the [[Chernobyl disaster|Chernobyl]] power plant in neighboring [[Ukrainian SSR]]. In June 1988 at the rural site of [[Kurapaty]] near Minsk, archaeologist [[Zianon Pazniak]], the leader of [[Christian Conservative Party of the BPF]], discovered [[mass graves]] which contained about 250,000 bodies of victims executed in 1937-1941. Some nationalists contend that this discovery is proof that the Soviet government was trying to erase the Belarusian people, causing Belarusian nationalists to seek independence.  
+
[[Joseph Stalin]] implemented a policy of [[Sovietization]] to isolate the Byelorussian SSR from Western influences as well as to replace Belarus's cultural identity with that of Russia. This policy involved sending Russians from various parts of the Soviet Union and placing them in key positions in the Byelorussian SSR government. The official use of the [[Belarusian language]] and other cultural aspects were limited by Moscow. Following Stalin's death in 1953, successor [[Nikita Khrushchev]] continued this program, stating, "The sooner we all start speaking Russian, the faster we shall build communism."<ref name="warpop">Helen Fedor. 1995. [http://countrystudies.us/belarus/11.htm Belarus - Stalin and Russification] ''Library of Congress; Country Studies.'' Retrieved July 9, 2008. </ref> When Soviet leader [[Mikhail Gorbachev]] began pushing through his [[Perestroika|reform plan]], the Belarusian people delivered a petition to him in December 1986 explaining the loss of their culture.  
 +
 
 +
In June 1988 at the rural site of [[Kurapaty]] near Minsk, [[archaeology|archaeologist]] [[Zianon Pazniak]], the leader of [[Christian Conservative Party of the BPF]], discovered [[mass grave]]s which contained about 250,000 bodies of victims executed in the period 1937-1941. Some nationalists contend that this discovery is proof that the Soviet government was trying to erase the Belarusian people, causing Belarusian nationalists to seek independence.  
 
[[Image:Bialoruscy.studenci.png|thumb|A banner displayed by Belarusian students near [[Warsaw University]] showing support for Belarusian independence]]
 
[[Image:Bialoruscy.studenci.png|thumb|A banner displayed by Belarusian students near [[Warsaw University]] showing support for Belarusian independence]]
Two years later, in March 1990, elections for seats in the [[Supreme Soviet]] of the Byelorussian SSR took place. Though the pro-independence [[Belarusian Popular Front]] took only 10% of the seats, the populace was content with the selection of the delegates. Belarus declared itself sovereign on July 27, 1990, by issuing the [[Declaration of State Sovereignty of the Belarusian Soviet Socialist Republic]]. With the support of the Communist Party, the country's name was changed to the Republic of Belarus on August 25, 1991. [[Stanislav Shushkevich]], the Chairman of the Supreme Soviet of Belarus, met with [[Boris Yeltsin]] of Russia and [[Leonid Kravchuk]] of [[Ukraine]] on December 8 1991 in [[Belavezhskaya Pushcha]] to formally declare the dissolution of the Soviet Union and the formation of the [[Commonwealth of Independent States]]. A [[Constitution of Belarus|national constitution]] was adopted in March 1994, in which the functions of prime minister were given to the [[president of Belarus|president]].
+
Two years later, in March 1990, elections for seats in the [[Supreme Soviet]] of the Byelorussian SSR took place. Though the pro-independence [[Belarusian Popular Front]] took only 10 percent of the seats, the populace was content with the selection of the delegates. Belarus declared itself sovereign on July 27, 1990, by issuing the [[Declaration of State Sovereignty of the Belarusian Soviet Socialist Republic]]. With the support of the Communist Party, the country's name was changed to the Republic of Belarus on August 25, 1991. [[Stanislav Shushkevich]], the Chairman of the Supreme Soviet of Belarus, met with [[Boris Yeltsin]] of Russia and [[Leonid Kravchuk]] of [[Ukraine]] on December 8, 1991 in [[Belavezhskaya Pushcha]] to formally declare the dissolution of the Soviet Union and the formation of the [[Commonwealth of Independent States]]. A national constitution was adopted in March 1994, in which the functions of prime minister were given to the president.
 +
 
 +
Two-round elections for the presidency on June 24 and July 10, 1994 resulted in the politically unknown [[Alexander Lukashenko]] winning more than 45 percent of the vote in the first round and 80 percent in the second round, beating [[Vyacheslav Kebich]] who got 14 percent. Lukashenko was re-elected in 2001 and in 2006.
 +
 
 +
==Government and politics==
 +
[[Image:Victory-square.jpg|thumb|left|Victory Square, [[Minsk]]]]
 +
Belarus is a [[presidential system|presidential]] [[republic]], governed by a president and the National Assembly. In accordance with the constitution, the president is elected once in five years. The National Assembly is a bicameral parliament comprising the 110-member House of Representatives (the lower house) and the 64-member Council of the Republic (the upper house). The House of Representatives has the power to appoint the prime minister, make constitutional amendments, call for a vote of confidence on the prime minister, and make suggestions on foreign and domestic policy. The Council of the Republic has the power to select various government officials, conduct an impeachment trial of the president, and accept or reject the bills passed by the House of Representatives. Each chamber has the ability to veto any law passed by local officials if it is contrary to the Constitution of Belarus. The government includes a Council of Ministers, headed by the prime minister. The members of this council need not be members of the legislature and are appointed by the president. The judiciary comprises the Supreme Court and specialized courts such as the Constitutional Court, which deals with specific issues related to constitutional and business law. The judges of national courts are appointed by the president and confirmed by the Council of the Republic. For criminal cases, the highest court of appeal is the Supreme Court. The Belarusian Constitution forbids the use of special extra-judicial courts.
 +
 
 +
In 2007, 98 of the 110 members of the House of Representatives were not affiliated with any political party and of the remaining twelve members, eight belonged to the [[Communist Party of Belarus]], three to the [[Agrarian Party of Belarus]], and one to the [[Liberal Democratic Party of Belarus]]. Most of the non-partisans represent a wide scope of social organizations such as workers' collectives, public associations and civil society organizations.
 +
 
 +
===Human rights and freedom===
 +
[[Image:State TV Belarus.jpg|thumb|Broadcasting center of state-run TV in Minsk]]
  
Two-round elections for the presidency (24 June 1994 and 10 July 1994  resulted in the politically unknown [[Alexander Lukashenko]] winning more than 45 % of the vote in the first round and 80 %  in the second round, beating [[Vyacheslav Kebich]] who got 14 %. Lukashenko was reelected [[Belarusian presidential election, 2001|in 2001]] and [[Belarusian presidential election, 2006|in 2006]].
+
Groups such as the [[Organization for Security and Co-operation in Europe]] (OSCE) declared the 2004 presidential election "un-free" because of the opposition parties' poor results and media bias in favor of the government. In the country's 2006 presidential election, Lukashenko was opposed by [[Alaksandar Milinkievič]], a candidate representing a coalition of opposition parties, and by [[Alaksandar Kazulin]] of the Social Democrats. Kazulin was detained and beaten by police during protests surrounding the [[All Belarusian People's Assembly]]. Lukashenko won the election with 80 percent of the vote, but the OSCE and other organizations called the election unfair.  
  
==Politics==
+
[[Alexander Lukashenko]], who has been the president of Belarus since 1994, has described himself as having an "authoritarian ruling style."<ref>''BBC News''. January 9, 2007. [http://news.bbc.co.uk/2/hi/europe/3882843.stm Profile: Alexander Lukashenko] Retrieved July 9, 2008. </ref> Western countries have described Belarus under Lukashenko as a [[dictatorship]], while the government has accused the same Western powers of trying to oust Lukashenko.<ref>Stephen Mulvey. September 10, 2001. [http://news.bbc.co.uk/1/hi/world/europe/116265.stm Profile: Europe's last dictator?] ''BBC News''. Retrieved July 9, 2008. </ref>
  
[[Image:Victory-square.jpg|thumb|left|Victory Square, [[Minsk]]]]
+
The [[Council of Europe]] has barred Belarus from [[European Union]] membership since 1997 for undemocratic voting and election irregularities in the November 1996 constitutional referendum and parliament bi-elections.<ref name="CoE">''Press Service of the Council of Europe''. January 17, 1997. [http://press.coe.int/cp/97/11a(97).htm Belarus suspended from the Council of Europe] Retrieved March 3, 2006. </ref>
Belarus is a [[presidential system|presidential]] [[republic]], governed by a [[Leaders of Belarus|president]] and the [[National Assembly of the Republic of Belarus|National Assembly]]. In accordance with the constitution, the president is elected once in five years. The National Assembly is a [[bicameral parliament]] comprising the 110-member [[House of Representatives of the Republic of Belarus|House of Representatives]] (the lower house) and the 64-member [[Council of the Republic of Belarus|Council of the Republic]] (the upper house). The House of Representatives has the power to appoint the [[List of Belarusian Prime Ministers|prime minister]], make constitutional amendments, call for a [[Motion of Confidence|vote of confidence]] on the prime minister, and make suggestions on foreign and domestic policy. The Council of the Republic has the power to select various government officials, conduct an impeachment trial of the president, and accept or reject the bills passed by the House of Representatives. Each chamber has the ability to veto any law passed by local officials if it is contrary to the [[Constitution of Belarus]]. Since 1994, [[Alexander Lukashenko]] has been the president of Belarus. The government includes a Council of Ministers, headed by the prime minister. The members of this council need not be members of the legislature and are appointed by the president. The judiciary comprises the [[Supreme Court of Belarus|Supreme Court]] and specialized courts such as the [[Constitutional Court of Belarus|Constitutional Court]], which deals with specific issues related to constitutional and business law. The judges of national courts are appointed by the president and confirmed by the Council of the Republic. For criminal cases, the highest court of appeal is the Supreme Court. The Belarusian Constitution forbids the use of special extra-judicial courts.  
 
  
[[Image:Belarus-Minsk-House of Government and Vladimir Lenin Monument (perspective corrected).jpg|thumb|House of Government in Minsk, with a statue to [[Vladimir Lenin]] in the foreground]]
+
The Belarusian government is also criticized for [[human rights]] violations and its actions against [[non-governmental organization]]s, independent journalists, national minorities, and opposition politicians.<ref name='HRW'>''Human Rights Watch''. 2005. [http://hrw.org/english/docs/2005/01/13/belaru9878.htm Human Rights Overview - Belarus] Retrieved July 9, 2008. </ref> <ref> ''Amnesty International''. [http://www.amnesty.org/en/region/europe-and-central-asia/eurasia/belarus Republic of Belarus] Retrieved July 9, 2008. </ref>
  
As of 2007, 98 of the 110 members of the House of Representatives are not affiliated with any political party and of the remaining twelve members, eight belong to the [[Communist Party of Belarus]], three to the [[Agrarian Party of Belarus]], and one to the [[Liberal Democratic Party of Belarus]]. Most of the non-partisans represent a wide scope of social organizations such as workers' collectives, public associations and civil society organizations. Neither the pro-Lukashenko parties, such as the [[Belarusian Socialist Sporting Party]] and the [[Republican Party of Labour and Justice|Republican Party of Labor and Justice]], nor the [[People's Coalition 5 Plus]] opposition parties, such as the [[Belarusian People's Front]] and the [[United Civil Party of Belarus]], won any seats in the [[Elections in Belarus#Elections of 2004|2004 elections]]. Groups such as the [[Organization for Security and Co-operation in Europe]] (OSCE) declared the election "un-free" because of the opposition parties' poor results and media bias in favor of the government. In the country's [[Belarusian presidential election, 2006|2006 presidential election]], Lukashenko was opposed by [[Alaksandar Milinkievič]], a candidate representing a coalition of opposition parties, and by [[Alaksandar Kazulin]] of the Social Democrats. Kazulin was detained and beaten by police during protests surrounding the [[All Belarusian People's Assembly]]. Lukashenko won the election with 80% of the vote, but the OSCE and other organizations called the election unfair.
+
Belarus is the only nation in Europe that retains the [[Capital punishment|death penalty]] for certain crimes during times of peace as well as times of war. In testimony to the U.S. Senate Committee on Foreign Relations, United States Secretary of State [[Condoleezza Rice]] labeled Belarus among the six nations of the "outposts of tyranny."<ref>Condoleezza Rice, January 18, 2005. [http://foreign.senate.gov/testimony/2005/RiceTestimony050118.pdf Opening Statement by Dr. Condoleezza Rice, Senate Foreign Relations Committee] ''U.S. Senate Committee on Foreign Relations''. Retrieved July 9, 2008. </ref>
  
Lukashenko has described himself as having an "authoritarian ruling style". <ref>{{cite web |url=http://news.bbc.co.uk/2/hi/europe/3882843.stm |year=20 March 2006 |title=Profile: Alexander Lukashenko |publisher=BBC News |accessdate=2006-03-26}}</ref> Western countries have described Belarus under Lukashenko as a dictatorship; the government has accused the same Western powers of trying to oust Lukashenko.<ref>{{cite news | first=Stephen | last=Mulvey | coauthors= | title=Profile: Europe's last dictator? | date=2001-09-10 | publisher=British Broadcasting Corporation | url =http://news.bbc.co.uk/1/hi/world/europe/116265.stm | work =BBC News | pages = | accessdate = 2007-12-21 | language = }}</ref> The [[Council of Europe]] has barred Belarus from [[European Union|EU]] membership since 1997 for undemocratic voting and election irregularities in the November 1996 constitutional referendum and parliament [[by-election]]s.<ref name="CoE">{{cite web |url=http://press.coe.int/cp/97/11a(97).htm |title=Belarus suspended from the Council of Europe |year=January 17 1997 |publisher=Press Service of the Council of Europe |accessdate=2006-03-26}}</ref> The Belarusian government is also criticized for [[human rights]] violations and its actions against [[non-governmental organization]]s, independent journalists, national minorities, and opposition politicians.<ref name='HRW'> {{cite web|url=http://hrw.org/english/docs/2005/01/13/belaru9878.htm |title=Essential Background - Belarus |accessdate=2006-03-26 |date=2005 |publisher=Human Rights Watch }}</ref><ref> {{cite web|url=http://www.amnesty.org/en/region/europe-and-central-asia/eurasia/belarus |title=Human rights by country - Belarus |accessdate=2007-12-22 |date=2007 |work=Amnesty International Report 2007 |publisher=[[Amnesty International]] }}</ref> Belarus is the only nation in Europe that retains the [[Capital punishment in Belarus|death penalty]] for certain crimes during times of peace and war In testimony to the U.S. Senate Committee on Foreign Relations, United States Secretary of State [[Condoleezza Rice]] labeled Belarus among the six nations of the "[[outposts of tyranny]]".<ref>{{cite web |url=http://foreign.senate.gov/testimony/2005/RiceTestimony050118.pdf |title=Opening Statement by Dr. Condoleezza Rice, Senate Foreign Relations Committee |year=January 18, 2005 |format=PDF |accessdate=2006-03-26}}</ref> In response, the Belarusian government called the assessment "quite far from reality".<ref>{{cite web |url=http://news.bbc.co.uk/2/hi/americas/4187361.stm |year=19 January 2005 |title=At-a-glance: 'Outposts of tyranny' |accessdate=2006-03-26 |publisher=BBC News}}</ref>
+
All [[media]] companies are regulated by the ''Law On Press and Other Mass Media'', passed on January 13, 1995. This grants [[freedom of press]]; however, Article 5 states that slander cannot be made against the president of Belarus or other officials outlined in the national constitution. The Belarusian Government has since been criticized for acting against media outlets. Newspapers such as ''Nasa Niva'' and the ''Belaruskaya Delovaya Gazeta'' were targeted for closure by the authorities after they published reports critical of President Lukashenko or other government officials.<ref>Philip T. Reeker, May 30, 2003.
 +
[http://www.state.gov/r/pa/prs/ps/2003/21094.htm Media Freedom in Belarus]. ''U.S. Department of State''. Retrieved July 11, 2008. </ref> [[The Organization for Security and Co-operation in Europe]] and [[Freedom House]] have commented regarding the loss of [[freedom of the press|press freedom]] in Belarus. In 2005, Freedom House gave Belarus a score of 6.75 (not free) when it came to dealing with press freedom. Another issue for the Belarusian press is the unresolved disappearance of several journalists.<ref>Vitali Silitski, 2005. [http://www.freedomhouse.org/template.cfm?page=47&nit=358&year=2005 Country Report - Belarus]. ''Freedom House''. Retrieved July 11, 2008. </ref>
  
 
== Foreign relations and military==
 
== Foreign relations and military==
 +
Belarus and [[Russia]] have been close trading partners and diplomatic allies since the breakup of the Soviet Union. Belarus is dependent on Russia for imports of raw materials and for its export market. The [[Union of Russia and Belarus]], a supranational confederation, was established in a 1996–1999 series of treaties that called for monetary union, equal rights, single citizenship, and a common foreign and defense policy. Although the future of the Union was in doubt because of Belarus' repeated delays of monetary union, the lack of a referendum date for the draft constitution, and a 2006–2007 dispute about petroleum trade, on December 11, 2007, reports emerged that a framework for the new state had been discussed between both countries.<ref>''AP, Reuters''. December 10, 2007. [http://www.themoscowtimes.com/stories/2007/12/10/022.html Russia-Belarus Union Presidency Dismissed] ''The Moscow Times''. Retrieved July 9, 2008. </ref> On May 27, 2008, Belarusian President Lukashenko said that he had named Russian Prime Minister [[Vladimir Putin]] the "prime minister" of the Russia-Belarus alliance. The meaning of the move was not immediately clear; however, there is speculation that Putin may become president of a unified state of Russia and Belarus after having stepped down as Russian president in May 2008.<ref>''Associated Press''. May 27, 2008. [http://www.msnbc.msn.com/id/24839107 Putin named PM of Belarus-Russia alliance] ''MSNBC''. Retrieved July 9, 2008. </ref>
  
[[Image:Lukashenko NAM meeting.jpg|thumb|left|President [[Alexander Lukashenko]] in Cuba, 2006]]
+
Belarus was a founding member of the [[Commonwealth of Independent States]] (CIS). The country has trade agreements with several [[European Union]] member states (despite other member states' travel ban on Lukashenko and top officials), as well as with its neighbors [[Lithuania]], [[Poland]] and [[Latvia]].  
Belarus and Russia have been close trading partners and diplomatic allies since the breakup of the Soviet Union. Belarus is dependent on Russia for imports of raw materials and for its export market.  The [[Union of Russia and Belarus]], a supranational confederation, was established in a 1996–99 series of treaties that called for monetary union, equal rights, single citizenship, and a common foreign and defense policy.  Although the future of the Union was in doubt because of Belarus' repeated delays of monetary union, the lack of a referendum date for the draft constitution, and a [[Russia-Belarus energy dispute|2006–07 dispute about petroleum trade]]. On December 11, 2007, reports emerged that a framework for the new state was discussed between both countries. <ref>{{cite news | first= | last= | coauthors= AP, Reuters | title=Russia-Belarus Union Presidency Dismissed | date=2007-12-10 | publisher= | url =http://www.themoscowtimes.com/stories/2007/12/10/022.html | work =The Moscow Times | pages = | accessdate = 2007-12-13 | language = }}</ref> On May 27, 2008, Belarusian President Lukashenko said that he had named Russian Prime Minister [[Vladimir Putin]] the "prime minister" of the Russia-Belarus alliance. The meaning of the move was not immediately clear; however, there is speculation that Putin may become president of a unified state of Russia and Belarus after having stepped down as Russian president in May 2008.<ref>{{cite news | first= | last= | author= AP | title=Putin named PM of Belarus-Russia alliance | date=2008-05-27 | publisher= | url =http://www.msnbc.msn.com/id/24839107 | work = | pages = | accessdate = 2008-05-27 | language = }}</ref>
 
  
Belarus was a founder member of the [[Commonwealth of Independent States]] (CIS); however, recently other CIS members have questioned the effectiveness of the organization. Belarus has trade agreements with several European Union member states (despite other member states' travel ban on Lukashenko and top officials),  as well as with its neighbors Lithuania, Poland and Latvia.  
+
Bilateral relations with the [[United States]] are strained because of the U.S. Department of State's support for various pro-democracy [[non-governmental organization|NGOs]] and because the Belarusian government has made it harder for US-based organizations to operate within the country. The 2004 US [[Belarus Democracy Act]] continued this trend, authorizing funding for pro-democracy Belarusian NGOs and forbidding loans to the Belarusian government except for humanitarian purposes.<ref>''Bureau of International Information Programs''. October 21, 2004. [http://www.america.gov/st/washfile-english/2004/October/20041022100536btrueveceR0.8822595.html Belarus Democracy Act Will Help Cause of Freedom, Bush Says] United States State Department. Retrieved July 9, 2008.</ref> Despite this, the two nations cooperate on intellectual property protection, prevention of [[human trafficking]] and [[technology crime]], and [[disaster relief]].  
  
Bilateral relations with the United States are strained because of the [[United States Department of State's]] support for various pro-democracy [[non-governmental organization|NGOs]] and because the Belarusian government has made it harder for US-based organizations to operate within the country.  The 2004 US [[Belarus Democracy Act]] continued this trend, authorizing funding for pro-democracy Belarusian NGOs and forbidding loans to the Belarusian government except for humanitarian purposes. <ref>{{cite news | first= | last= | coauthors= | title=Belarus Democracy Act Will Help Cause of Freedom, Bush Says | date=2007-10-22 | publisher=United States State Department | url =http://usinfo.state.gov/dhr/Archive/2004/Oct/22-739373.html | work =USINO | pages = | accessdate = 2007-12-22 | language = }}</ref> Despite this, the two nations cooperate on intellectual property protection, prevention of human trafficking and technology crime, and disaster relief. <
+
Belarus has increased cooperation with [[China]], strengthened by the visit of President Lukashenko to that country in October 2005. Belarus has strong ties with [[Syria]], which President Lukashenko considers a key partner in the [[Middle East]]. In addition to the CIS, Belarus has membership in the [[Eurasian Economic Community]] and the [[Collective Security Treaty Organization]]. Belarus has been a member of the international [[Non-Aligned Movement]] since 1998 and a member of the [[United Nations]] since its founding in 1945.  
  
Belarus has increased cooperation with China, strengthened by the visit of President Lukashenko to China in October 2005.  Belarus has strong ties with Syria, which President Lukashenko considers a key partner in the Middle East.  In addition to the CIS, Belarus has membership in the [[Eurasian Economic Community]] and the [[Collective Security Treaty Organization]]. Belarus has been a member of the international [[Non-Aligned Movement]] since 1998 and a member of the [[United Nations]] since its founding in 1945.  
+
===Military===
 +
Belarus' Armed Forces, which were formed in 1992 using parts of the former [[Soviet Armed Forces]], consists of three branches: the Army, the Air Force, and the Ministry of Defense joint staff. The transformation of the ex-Soviet forces into the Armed Forces of Belarus, which was completed in 1997, reduced the number of its soldiers by 30,000 and restructured its leadership and military formations.  
  
The [[Armed Forces of Belarus]] have three branches: the Army, the Air Force, and the [[Ministry of Defense (Belarus)|Ministry of Defense]] joint staff. Colonel-General Leonid Maltsev heads the Ministry of Defense,  and Alexander Lukashenko (as president) serves as Commander-in-Chief. The Armed Forces were formed in 1992 using parts of the former [[Soviet Armed Forces]] on the new republic's territory. The transformation of the ex-Soviet forces into the Armed Forces of Belarus, which was completed in 1997, reduced the number of its soldiers by 30,000 and restructured its leadership and military formations. <ref> {{cite web|url=http://www.mod.mil.by/7okrugarmia.html |title=History |accessdate=2007-12-22 |date=2006 |publisher=Ministry of Defense of the Republic of Belarus |language=Russian }}</ref> Most of Belarus's service members are [[conscripts]], who serve for 12 months if they have higher education or 18 months if they do not. However, demographic decreases in the Belarusians of conscription age have increased the importance of contract soldiers, who numbered 12,000 as of 2001. <ref name="conscripts">{{cite web|url=http://mdb.cast.ru/mdb/5-2001/dp/mdafb/ |title=Military Development and the Armed Forces of Belarus |accessdate=2007-10-09 |last=Bykovsky |first=Pavel |coauthors=Alexander Vasilevich |date=2001–05 |work=Moscow Defense Brief }}</ref> In 2005, about 1.4% of Belarus's [[gross domestic product]] was devoted to military expenditures. <ref name="ciabymil"> {{cite web|url=https://www.cia.gov/library/publications/the-world-factbook/geos/bo.html#Military |title=Belarus - Military |accessdate=2007-10-09 |date=2005 |work=The World Factbook |publisher=Central Intelligence Agency }}</ref> Belarus has not expressed a desire to join [[NATO]] but has participated in the Individual Partnership Program since 1997.  
+
Most of Belarus's service members are [[conscripts]], who serve for 12 months if they have higher education or 18 months if they do not. However, demographic decreases in the Belarusians of conscription age have increased the importance of contract soldiers, who numbered 12,000 in 2001.  
 +
 
 +
In 2005, approximately 1.4 percent of Belarus's [[gross domestic product]] was devoted to military expenditures.<ref name="ciabymil">''CIA World Factbook''. 2005. [https://www.cia.gov/library/publications/the-world-factbook/geos/bo.html#Military Belarus - Military] Retrieved July 9, 2008. </ref> Belarus has not expressed a desire to join [[NATO]] but has participated in the Individual Partnership Program since 1997.
  
 
==Provinces and districts==
 
==Provinces and districts==
 
[[Image:Belarus.geohive.png|thumb|250px|Provinces of Belarus]]
 
[[Image:Belarus.geohive.png|thumb|250px|Provinces of Belarus]]
Belarus is divided into six ''voblasts'', or administrative division (provinces), which are named after the cities that serve as their administrative centers. Each voblast has a provincial legislative authority, called an ''oblsovet'', which is elected by the voblast's residents, and a provincial executive authority called a voblast administration, whose leader is appointed by the president. Voblasts are further subdivided into ''[[raion]]s'' (commonly translated as ''districts'' or ''regions''). As with voblasts, each raion has its own legislative authority (''raisovet'', or raion council) elected by its residents, and an executive authority (raion administration) appointed by higher executive powers. As of 2002, there are six voblasts, 118 raions, 102 towns and 108 urbanized settlements. Minsk is given a special status, due to the city serving as the national capital. Minsk City is run by an executive committee and granted a charter of self-rule by the national government.
+
Belarus is divided into six ''voblasts,'' or administrative division (provinces), which are named after the cities that serve as their administrative centers. Each voblast has a provincial legislative authority, called an ''oblsovet.'' which is elected by the voblast's residents, and a provincial executive authority called a voblast administration, whose leader is appointed by the president. Voblasts are further subdivided into ''[[raion]]s'' (commonly translated as ''districts'' or ''regions''). As with voblasts, each raion has its own legislative authority (''raisovet,'' or raion council) elected by its residents, and an executive authority (raion administration) appointed by higher executive powers. As of 2002, there are six voblasts, 118 raions, 102 towns and 108 urbanized settlements. Minsk is given a special status, due to the city serving as the national capital. Minsk City is run by an executive committee and granted a charter of self-rule by the national government.  
  
 
'''Voblasts (with administrative centers):'''  
 
'''Voblasts (with administrative centers):'''  
Line 137: Line 184:
 
# [[Minsk|Minsk City]]
 
# [[Minsk|Minsk City]]
  
==Geography==
+
==Economy==
 +
[[Image:Belarus und Heuwender im Einsatz.jpg|thumb|275px|A Belarusian-made tractor being used to farm]]
 +
Following the collapse of the [[Soviet Union]] all former Soviet republics faced a deep economic crisis. Belarus' path of overcoming this crisis was "[[market socialism]]," launched by [[Alexander Lukashenko]] following his 1994 election to the presidency. In keeping with this policy, administrative controls over prices and currency exchange rates were introduced. Also the state's right to intervene in the management of private enterprise was expanded, but on March 4, 2008, the President issued a decree abolishing the golden share rule in a clear movement to improve its international rating regarding foreign investment.
  
[[Image:Belarus-Vaskowskae Reservoir.jpg|thumb|left|Vaskowskae reservoir]]
+
As part of the former [[Soviet Union]], Belarus had a relatively well-developed industrial base which it retained even after the break-up of the U.S.S.R. The country also has a broad [[agriculture|agricultural]] base and a high [[education]] level. Among the former republics of the Soviet Union, it had one of the highest standards of living. However, the country had to face the difficult challenge of moving from a state-run economy with high priority on military production and heavy industry to a civilian, free-market system.
Belarus is [[landlocked]], relatively flat, and contains large tracts of [[marsh]]y land. According to a 1994 estimate by the United Nations [[Food and Agricultural Organization]], 34% of Belarus is covered by forests. Many streams and 11,000 lakes are found in Belarus. Three major rivers run through the country: the [[Neman River|Neman]], the [[Pripyat River|Pripyat]], and the [[Dnepr River|Dnepr]]. The Neman flows westward towards the Baltic sea and the Pripyat flows eastward to the Dnepr; the Dnepr flows southward towards the [[Black Sea]]. Belarus's highest point is [[Dzyarzhynskaya Hara]] (Dzyarzhynsk Hill) at {{convert|345|m|ft}}, and its lowest point is on the Neman River at {{convert|90|m|ft.  The average elevation of Belarus is {{convert|525|ft|m}} above sea level.  The climate ranges from harsh winters, with average January temperatures at {{convert|-6|°C|°F|lk=on}}, to cool and moist summers with an average temperature of {{convert|18|°C|°F}}.  Belarus has an average annual rainfall of 550 to 700 millimeters (21.7 to 27.5 inches). The country experiences a yearly transition from a [[continental climate]] to a [[maritime climate]].
 
[[Image:Belarus-Minsk Province-Horses.jpg|thumb|Horses grazing in Minsk Province]]
 
  
Belarus's natural resources include [[peat]] deposits, small quantities of oil and natural gas, [[granite]], dolomite ([[limestone]]), [[marl]], chalk, sand, gravel, and clay.  About 70% of the radiation from neighboring Ukraine's 1986 [[Chernobyl disaster|Chernobyl nuclear disaster]] entered Belarusian territory, and as of 2005 about a fifth of Belarusian land (principally farmland and forests in the southeastern provinces) continues to be affected by radiation fallout.<ref name="Chernobyl">{{cite web| url=http://news.bbc.co.uk/2/hi/europe/4485003.stm| publisher=BBC News| title=Belarus cursed by Chernobyl| first=Sarah| last=Rainsford| year=April 26 2005| accessdate=2006-03-26}}</ref> The United Nations and other agencies have aimed to reduce the level of radiation in affected areas, especially through the use of caesium binders and [[rapeseed]] cultivation, which are meant to decrease soil levels of [[caesium-137]].<ref name="uncher">{{cite web| url=http://chernobyl.undp.org/english/belarus.html| publisher=United Nations| title=The United Nations and Chernobyl - The Republic of Belarus| year=2004| accessdate=2007-10-04}}</ref><ref name='iaea'>{{cite news | first=Marilyn | last=Smith | coauthors= | title=Ecological reservation in Belarus fosters new approaches to soil remediation | date= | publisher=International Atomic Energy Agency | url =http://tc.iaea.org/tcweb/news_archive/Chernobyl/ecoreserve/default.asp | work = | pages = | accessdate = 2007-12-19 | language = }}</ref>
+
After an initial outburst of [[capitalism|capitalist]] reform from 1991-1994, including [[privatization]] of state enterprises, creation of institutions of private property, and entrepreneurship, Belarus under Lukashenko has greatly slowed its pace of privatization and other market reforms, emphasizing the need for a "socially oriented market economy." About 80 percent of all industry remains in state hands, and [[foreign investment]] has been hindered by a climate hostile to business. Banks, which had been privatized after independence, were [[Nationalization|re-nationalized]] under Lukashenko.
  
Belarus is bordered by Latvia on the north, Lithuania to the northwest, Poland to the west, Russia to the north and east and Ukraine to the south. Treaties in 1995 and 1996 demarcated Belarus's borders with Latvia and Lithuania, but Belarus failed to ratify a 1997 treaty establishing the Belarus-Ukraine border.<ref> {{cite web|url=http://www.gkpv.gov.by/en/state_border_en/delim_history |title=State Border - Delimitation History |accessdate=2007-12-22 |date=2006 |publisher=State Border Committee of the Republic of Belarus }}</ref> Belarus and Lithuania ratified final border demarcation documents in February 2007. <ref> {{cite web|url=http://www.urm.lt/index.php?-1507529950 |title=Lithuania's Cooperation with Belarus |accessdate=2007-12-19 |publisher=Lithuanian Ministry of Foreign Affairs }}</ref>
+
[[Gross domestic product|Economic output]], which declined for several years, revived somewhat in the late 1990s, but the economy remains dependent on Russian subsidies. Until 2000, subsidies to state enterprises and price controls on industrial and consumer staples constituted a major feature of the Belarusian economy. Inflationary monetary practices, including the printing of [[money]] also has been regularly used to finance real sector growth and to cover the payment of salaries and pensions.
  
==Economy==
+
In addition to the burdens imposed by high [[inflation]], businesses have been subject to pressure on the part of central and local governments including arbitrary changes in regulations, numerous rigorous inspections, and retroactive application of new business regulations which prohibit formerly legal practices.
 +
[[Image:Image-Belarusion GDP grow (1995-~2008).png|thumb|left|Belarusian GDP growth since 1995 and estimate for 2008]]
 +
As the Belarusian economy is closely tied to [[Russia]]'s economy, the latter's financial crisis of 1998 hit Belarus nearly equally as hard. In the 1990s [[poverty]] became a significant problem. Research carried out in Belarus in 1996 under the support of the [[World Bank]] showed that the number of poor had sharply increased; from 5 percent in 1992 to 22 percent by 1995. According to official statistics, 26.7 percent of urban population and 33.6 percent of rural population were below the poverty line in 2001.<ref>''Embassy of the Republic of Belarus in the United States''. [http://www.belarusembassy.org/humanitarian/poverty_assessment.htm Summary of the Report “Belarus: Poverty Assessment. Can Poverty Reduction and Access to Services Be Sustained?”] Retrieved July 10, 2008. </ref><ref>''United Nations Development Program''. [http://un.by/en/undp/news/belarus/pr18-02-3-1.html UNDP and the Government of Belarus have launched a new joint project aimed at elaborating the national poverty reduction strategy] Retrieved July 10, 2008.</ref><ref>''World Bank''. [http://wbln0018.worldbank.org/dg/povertys.nsf/0/dae4d2c00c1c7e1585256b210075cf4d?OpenDocument Household Archives Poverty Assessment Summaries] Retrieved July 10, 2008.</ref>
  
[[Image:Belarus und Heuwender im Einsatz.jpg|thumb|A Belarusian-made tractor being used to farm]]
+
However, efforts by the Belarusian government and some favorable factors such as the union with Russia which opened vast markets for Belarusian goods and also allowed Belarus to buy oil and gas at Russia's internal price, allowed Belarus to bypass the severe economic hardships and crises that many former Soviet Union transition economies encountered. It resulted in the economic growth seen in recent years. According to the United Nations' ''World Economic Situation and Prospects 2006'' report Belarus registers major economic growth: GDP growth rate as low as 3 percent in 1999 showed 11 percent (2nd place in CIS) in 2004 and 8.5 percent (4th place after [[Azerbaijan]] and [[Kazakhstan]] - oil and gas exporters - and [[Armenia]]) in 2005. In terms of GDP growth rate Belarus also outperforms neighboring [[Poland]], [[Latvia]] and [[Lithuania]].  
Most of the [[Economy of Belarus|Belarusian economy]] remains [[state intervention|state-controlled]], as in Soviet times.  Thus, 51.2% of Belarusians are employed by state-controlled companies, 47.4% are employed by private Belarusian companies (of which 5.7%<!-- 2.7/47.4 = 5.7 —> are partially foreign-owned), and 1.4% are employed by foreign companies.<ref name="econstats">{{Cite web|url=http://belstat.gov.by/homep/en/indicators/labor.php|title=Labour|accessdate=2007-11-06|year=2006|author= Ministry of Statistics and Analysis of the Republic of Belarus}}</ref> The country relies on imports such as oil from Russia. Important agricultural products include potatoes and cattle byproducts, including meat. As of 1994, the biggest exports from Belarus were heavy machinery (especially tractors), agricultural products, and energy products.  
 
  
[[Image:Image-Belarusion GDP grow (1995-~2008).png|thumb|left|Belarusian GDP growth since 1995 and estimate for 2008]]
+
[[Image:Belarus-2000-Bill-500-Obverse.jpg|thumb|Obverse of the 500 [[Belarusian ruble]] (BYB/BYR), the national currency]]
Historically important branches of industry include textiles and wood processing.  As of the 1991 dissolution of the Soviet Union, Belarus was one of the world's most industrially developed states by percentage of [[gross domestic product]] (GDP) as well as the richest CIS state. <ref name="wb97">[[World Bank]]. "Belarus: Prices, Markets, and Enterprise Reform," [http://books.google.com/books?id=0jCvjCHPHpcC&pg=PA83&dq=isbn:0821339761&sig=RynOYFR1n4g7p2Vj4MuYrbikQsU#PPA1,M1 pp. 1]. World Bank, 1997. ISBN 0821339761</ref> Economically, Belarus involved itself in the CIS, [[Eurasian Economic Community]], and [[Union of Russia and Belarus|Union with Russia]]. During the 1990s, however, industrial production plunged because of decreases in imported inputs, in investment, and in demand for exports from traditional trading partners. It took until 1996 for the gross domestic product to rise; this coincided with the government putting more emphasis on using the GDP for social welfare and state subsidies.  The GDP for 2006 was US$83.1 billion in [[purchasing power parity]] (PPP) dollars (estimate), or about $8,100 per capita. In 2005, the gross domestic product increased by about 9.9%, with the inflation rate averaging about 9.5%.
+
[[Peat]], the country's most valuable resource, is used for fuel and fertilizer and in the chemical industry. Belarus also has deposits of [[clay]], [[sand]], [[chalk]], [[dolomite]], [[phosphorite]], and [[rock salt|rock]] and [[potassium]] [[salt]]. [[Forest]]s cover approximately a third of the land, and [[lumber]]ing is an important occupation. [[Potato]]es, [[flax]], [[hemp]], [[sugarbeet]]s, [[rye]], [[oat]]s, and [[wheat]] are the chief agricultural products. [[Dairy]] and beef [[cattle]], [[pig]]s, and [[chicken]]s are raised. Belarus has only small reserves of [[petroleum]] and [[natural gas]] and imports most of its oil and gas from [[Russia]]. The main branches of industry produce tractors and trucks, earth movers for use in construction and mining, metal-cutting machine tools, agricultural equipment, motorcycles, chemicals, fertilizer, [[textile]]s, and consumer goods. The chief trading partners are Russia, [[Ukraine]], [[Poland]], and [[Germany]].
 
 
Belarus's largest trading partner is Russia, accounting for nearly half of total trade in 2006.  As of 2006, the European Union is Belarus's next largest trading partner, with nearly a third of foreign trade.  Because of its failure to protect labor rights, however, Belarus lost its E.U. [[Generalised System of Preferences|Generalized System of Preferences]] status on June 21, 2007, which raised tariff rates to their prior [[most-favored nation]] levels. <ref name="eutrade"> European Union [http://ec.europa.eu/external_relations/belarus/pdf/belarus_trade_en.pdf The EU's Relationship With Belarus - Trade] (PDF). Published November 2006. Retrieved October 6, 2007.</ref> Belarus applied to become a member of the [[World Trade Organization]] in 1993.  
 
  
The labor force consists of more than four million people, among whom women hold slightly more jobs than men. In 2005, nearly a quarter of the population was employed in industrial factories. Employment is also high in agriculture, manufacturing sales, trading goods, and education. The unemployment rate, according to Belarusian government statistics, was about 1.5% in 2005. The number of unemployed persons totaled 679,000 of whom about two-thirds are women. The rate of unemployment has been decreasing since 2003, and the overall rate is the highest since statistics were first compiled in 1995.
+
Because of its failure to protect labor rights, Belarus lost its E.U. [[Generalised System of Preferences|Generalized System of Preferences]] status on June 21, 2007, which raised tariff rates to their prior [[most-favored nation]] levels.<ref name="eutrade">''European Union''. November 2006. [http://ec.europa.eu/external_relations/belarus/pdf/belarus_trade_en.pdf The EU's Relationship With Belarus - Trade] Retrieved July 10, 2008. </ref> Belarus applied to become a member of the [[World Trade Organization]] in 1993.  
  
[[Image:Belarus-2000-Bill-500-Obverse.jpg|thumb|Obverse of the 500 [[Belarusian ruble]] (BYB/BYR), the national currency]]
+
The massive [[nuclear power|nuclear]] accident of April 26, 1986 at the [[Chernobyl]] nuclear power plant across the border in [[Ukraine]], had a devastating effect on Belarus; as a result of the [[radiation]] release, agriculture in a large part of the country was destroyed, and many villages were abandoned. Resettlement and medical costs were substantial and long-term.
The currency of Belarus is the [[Belarusian ruble]] (BYR). The currency was introduced in May 1992, replacing the [[Soviet ruble]]. The ruble was reintroduced with new values in 2000 and has been in use ever since.  As part of the [[Union of Russia and Belarus]], both states have discussed using a single currency along the same lines as the [[Euro]]. This has led to the proposal that the Belarusian ruble be discontinued in favor of the [[Russian ruble]] (RUB), starting as early as 1 January 2008. As of August 2007, the [[National Bank of the Republic of Belarus|National Bank of Belarus]] is no longer pegging the Belarusian ruble to the Russian ruble.  The banking system of Belarus is composed of 30 state-owned banks and one privatized bank.  
 
  
 
==Demographics==
 
==Demographics==
 +
Ethnic [[Belarusians]] constitute 81.2 percent of Belarus's total population. The next largest ethnic groups are [[Russians]] (11.4 percent), [[Polish people|Poles]] (3.9 percent), and [[Ukrainians]] (2.4 percent). Belarus's two official [[language]]s are [[Belarusian language|Belarusian]] and [[Russian language|Russian]], spoken at home by 36.7 percent and 62.8 percent of Belarusians, respectively. Minorities also speak [[Polish language|Polish]], [[Ukrainian language|Ukrainian]] and [[Eastern Yiddish]].
  
[[Image:Brest Kirche.jpg|thumb|left|222px|Resurrection Church of Brest is the biggest one in Belarus, over 5000 people can attend service]]
+
Belarus has a population density of about 50 people per square kilometer (127 per sq mi); 71.7 percent of its total population is concentrated in urban areas. [[Minsk]], the nation's capital and largest [[city]], is home to 1,741,400 of Belarus's 9,724,700 residents. [[Gomel]], with 481,000 people, is the second largest city and serves as the capital of the Homel Oblast. Other large cities are [[Mogilev]] (365,100), [[Vitebsk]] (342,400), [[Hrodna]] (314,800) and [[Brest, Belarus|Brest]] (298,300).  
Ethnic [[Belarusians]] constitute 81.2% of Belarus's total population. The next largest ethnic groups are [[Russians]] (11.4%), [[Polish people|Poles]] (3.9%), and [[Ukrainians]] (2.4%).  Belarus's two official languages are [[Belarusian language|Belarusian]] and Russian, spoken at home by 36.7% and 62.8% of Belarusians, respectively.<ref>Data of the 1999 Belarusian general census  Minorities also speak [[Polish language|Polish]], [[Ukrainian language|Ukrainian]] and [[Eastern Yiddish]].  
 
  
Belarus has a population density of about 50 people per square kilometer (127 per sq mi); 71.7% of its total population is concentrated in urban areas. [[Minsk]], the nation's capital and largest city, is home to 1,741,400 of Belarus's 9,724,700 residents. [[Gomel]], with 481,000 people, is the second largest city and serves as the capital of the Homel Oblast. Other large cities are [[Mogilev]] (365,100), [[Vitebsk]] (342,400), [[Hrodna]] (314,800) and [[Brest, Belarus|Brest]] (298,300).
+
Like many other [[Europe]]an countries, Belarus has a negative population growth rate and a negative natural growth rate. In 2007, Belarus' population declined by 0.41 percent and its [[fertility rate]] was 1.22, well below the replacement rate. Its [[net migration rate]] is +0.38 per 1,000, indicating that Belarus experiences slightly more [[immigration]] than [[emigration]]. As of 2007, 69.7 percent of Belarus's population was aged 14 to 64; 16 percent was under 14, and 14.6 percent was 65 or older. Its population is also aging: while the current median age is 37, it is estimated that Belarusians' median age will be 51 in 2050. There are about 0.88 males per female in Belarus. The average life expectancy is 68.7 years (63.0 years for males and 74.9 years for females). Over 99 percent of Belarusians are literate.
  
Like many other European countries, Belarus has a negative population growth rate and a negative natural growth rate. In 2007, Belarus's population declined by 0.41% and its [[fertility rate]] was 1.22, well [[Sub-replacement fertility|below the replacement rate]]. Its [[net migration rate]] is +0.38 per 1,000, indicating that Belarus experiences slightly more [[immigration]] than [[emigration]].  As of 2007, 69.7% of Belarus's population is aged 14 to 64; 16% is under 14, and 14.6% is 65 or older.  Its population is also aging: while the current median age is 37,  it is estimated that Belarusians' median age will be 51 in 2050.  There are about 0.88 males per female in Belarus. The average life expectancy is 68.7 years (63.0 years for males and 74.9 years for females). Over 99% of Belarusians are literate.  
+
[[Image:Belarus-Polatsk-Cathedral of Sophia-3.jpg|thumb|Cathedral of Saint Sophia in [[Polotsk]]]]
 +
Belarus has historically been a [[Russian Orthodox]] country, with minorities practicing [[Catholicism]], [[Judaism]], and other [[religion]]s. Most Belarusians converted to the Russian Orthodox Church following Belarus' annexation by Russia after the partitions of the Polish-Lithuanian Commonwealth. Belarus's Roman Catholic minority, which makes up perhaps 10 percent of the country's population and is concentrated in the western part of the country, especially around [[Hrodna]], is made up of a mixture of Belarusians and the country's [[Polish people|Polish]] and [[Lithuanian people|Lithuanian]] minorities. About 1 percent belong to the [[Belarusian Greek Catholic Church]]. Belarus was once a major center of the European Jewish population, with 10 percent of its population being Jewish, but the population of Jews has been reduced by [[war]], [[starvation]], and the [[Holocaust]] to a tiny minority of about 1 percent or less. Emigration from Belarus has been an additional cause for the shrinking number of Jewish residents.  
  
[[Image:Belarus-Polatsk-Cathedral of Sophia-3.jpg|thumb|Cathedral of Saint Sophia in [[Polotsk]]]]
+
According to Article 16 of its [[Constitution of Belarus|Constitution]], Belarus has no official religion. While the [[freedom of worship]] is granted in the same article, religious organizations that are deemed harmful to the government or social order of the country can be prohibited.
Belarus has historically been a [[Russian Orthodox]] country, with minorities practicing [[Catholicism]], [[Judaism]], and other religions. Most Belarusians converted to the Russian Orthodox Church after Belarus was annexed by Russia after the partitions of the Polish-Lithuanian Commonwealth. Belarus's Roman Catholic minority, which makes up perhaps 10% of the country's population and is concentrated in the western part of the country, especially around [[Hrodna]], is made up of a mixture of Belarusians and the country's [[Polish people|Polish]] and [[Lithuanian people|Lithuanian]] minorities. About 1% belong to the [[Belarusian Greek Catholic Church]].  Belarus was a major center of the European Jewish population, with 10% being Jewish, but the population of Jews has been reduced by war, starvation, and the [[Holocaust]] to a tiny minority of about 1% or less. Emigration from Belarus is a cause for the shrinking number of Jewish residents.  According to Article 16 of the [[Constitution of Belarus|Constitution]], Belarus has no official religion. While the [[freedom of worship]] is granted in the same article, religious organizations that are deemed harmful to the government or social order of the country can be prohibited.  
 
  
 
==Culture==
 
==Culture==
 +
The Belarusian government sponsors annual cultural [[festival]]s including the [[Slavianski Bazaar in Vitebsk]], which showcases Belarusian performers, artists, writers, musicians, and actors. Several state holidays, such as Independence Day and Victory Day, attract large crowds and often include displays such as [[fireworks]] and military parades, especially in Vitebsk and Minsk. The government's Ministry of Culture finances events promoting Belarusian arts and culture both inside and outside the country.
  
[[Image:Belarus-Minsk-New National Library-1.jpg|thumb|left|National Library of Belarus in Minsk]]
+
Much of Belarus' [[architecture|architectural]] heritage was destroyed during [[World War II]], especially in Minsk. While the Minsk city center was rebuilt in the grandiose Stalinist style with its classical borrowings, older surviving parts of the country reflect period religious architecture. The Cathedral of Saint Sophia in Polatsk was built in the Eastern Orthodox style in the eleventh century. From the twelfth to sixteenth centuries buildings were constructed in stone fortress style. The [[Baroque]] style, linked to the eastward movement of the Roman Catholic Church, is evident in the [[Jesuit]], Bernardine, and Bridgettine churches in [[Hrodna]]. Classical styles became popular in the eighteenth century, as seen in the Governor’s Palace in Hrodna.<ref>''Encyclopædia Britannica Online''. 2008. [http://www.britannica.com/EBchecked/topic/59081/Belarus Belarus] Retrieved July 10, 2008.</ref> [[Mir Castle]], with its successive cultural influences (Gothic, Renaissance and Baroque) that blend to create an impressive monument recognized by UNESCO as a [[World Heritage Site]]. It is used for historical re-enactments to celebrate Medieval Belarus historical events and dancing.  
Belarusian literature began with 11th- to 13th century religious writing; the 12th century poetry of [[Cyril of Turaw]] is representative.<ref name='bypoem'>{{cite web|url=http://www.belarusguide.com/culture1/literature/Old_Poetry.html |title=Old Belarusian Poetry |accessdate=2007-10-09 |date=1994 |publisher=Virtual Guide to Belarus }}</ref> By the 16th century, [[Polotsk]] resident [[Francysk Skaryna]] translated the Bible into Belarusian. It was published in [[Prague]] and [[Vilnius]] between 1517 and 1525, making it the first book printed in Belarus or anywhere in Eastern Europe.<ref name="byeb">"Belarus." [[Encyclopædia Britannica]]. Encyclopædia Britannica Online. <http://www.britannica.com/eb/article-33482>.</ref> The modern period of Belarusian literature began in the late 19th century; one important writer was [[Yanka Kupala]]. Many notable Belarusian writers of the time, such as [[Uładzimir Žyłka]], Kazimir Svayak, [[Yakub Kolas]], [[Źmitrok Biadula]] and [[Maksim Haretski]], wrote for a Belarusian language paper called ''[[Nasha Niva]]'', published in Vilnius. After Belarus was incorporated into the Soviet Union, the Soviet government took control of the Republic's cultural affairs. The free development of literature occurred only in Polish-held territory until Soviet occupation in 1939.<ref name="byeb"/> Several poets and authors went into exile after the Nazi occupation of Belarus, not to return until the 1960s.<ref name="byeb"/> The last major revival of Belarusian literature occurred in the 1960s with novels published by [[Vasil Bykaŭ]] and [[Uładzimir Karatkievič]].
 
 
 
[[Image:Babka Potato Dish-1.jpg|thumb|[[Babka]], a traditional Belarusian potato dish]]
 
 
 
In the 17th century, Polish composer [[Stanislaw Moniuszko]] composed operas and chamber music pieces while living in Minsk. During his stay, he worked with Belarusian poet [[Vincent Dunin-Marcinkevich]] and created the opera ''Sielanka'' ''(Peasant Woman)''. At the end of the 19th century, major Belarusian cities formed their own opera and ballet companies. The ballet ''[[Nightingale (ballet)|Nightingale]]'' by M. Kroshner was composed during the Soviet era and became the first Belarusian ballet showcased at the National Academic Bolshoi Ballet Theatre in Minsk.<ref>{{cite news | first=Crystal | last=Zou | coauthors= | title=Ballets for Christmas | date=2003-12-11 | publisher= | url =http://app1.chinadaily.com.cn/star/2003/1211/wh28-1.html | work =Shanghai Star | pages = | accessdate = 2007-12-20 | language = }}</ref> After the [[Great Patriotic War (term)|Great Patriotic War]], music focused on the hardships of the Belarusian people or on those who took up arms in defense of the homeland. During this period, A. Bogatyryov, creator of the opera ''In Polesye Virgin Forest'', served as the "tutor" of Belarusian composers.<ref name="clasmus">Virtual Guide to Belarus - [http://www.belarusguide.com/culture1/music/Belarusian_composers_&_classical_music.htm Classical Music of Belarus]. Retrieved March 21, 2007.</ref> The National Academic Theatre of Ballet, in Minsk, was awarded the [[Benois de la Dance Prize]] in 1996 as the top ballet company in the world.<ref name="clasmus"/> Although rock music has risen in popularity in recent years, the Belarusian government has suppressed the development of popular music through various legal and economic mechanisms.<ref>Freemuse [http://www.freemuse.org/sw12630.asp Blacklisted bands play in Poland]. Published on March 17, 2006. Retrieved March 18, 2007.</ref> Since 2004, Belarus has been sending artists to the [[Eurovision Song Contest]].<ref>National State Teleradiocompany[http://www.tvr.by/eng/konkurs.asp Page on the 2004 Belarusian entry to the Eurovision Song Contest]. Published 2004. Retrieved March 18, 2007.</ref>
 
 
 
The Belarusian government sponsors annual cultural festivals such as the [[Slavianski Bazaar in Vitebsk]], which showcases Belarusian performers, artists, writers, musicians, and actors. Several state holidays, such as [[Independence Day]] and [[Victory Day (Eastern Europe)|Victory Day]], draw big crowds and often include displays such as fireworks and military parades, especially in Vitebsk and Minsk.<ref name="festivals">{{cite web| url=http://www.belarusembassy.org/belarus/culture.htm| title=Belarusian National Culture| publisher=Embassy of the Republic of Belarus in the United States of America| accessdate=2006-03-26}}</ref> The government's Ministry of Culture finances events promoting Belarusian arts and culture both inside and outside the country.
 
 
 
[[Image:Belarus dress.jpg|thumb|left|upright|Children in traditional dress]]
 
 
 
The traditional Belarusian dress originates from the [[Kievan Rus']] period. Because of the cool climate, clothes, usually composed of [[flax]] or [[wool]], were designed to keep the body warm. They are decorated with ornate patterns influenced by the neighboring cultures: Poles, Lithuanians, Latvians, Russians, and other European nations. Each region of Belarus has developed specific design patterns.<ref>Virtual Guide to Belarus [http://www.belarusguide.com/culture1/clothing/index.html Belarusian traditional clothing]. Retrieved on March 21, 2007.</ref> An ornamental pattern used on some early dresses is currently used to decorate the hoist of the [[Flag of Belarus|Belarusian national flag]], adopted in a [[Belarusian referendum, 1995|disputed referendum]] in 1995.<ref>Flags of the World [http://fotw.fivestarflags.com/by.html#orn Belarus - Ornament]. Published November 26, 2006. Retrieved March 21, 2007.</ref>  
 
 
 
[[Cuisine of Belarus|Belarusian cuisine]] consists mainly of vegetables, meat (especially pork), and breads. Foods are usually either slowly cooked or stewed. A typical Belarusian eats a very light breakfast and two hearty meals, with dinner being the largest meal of the day. Wheat and rye breads are consumed in Belarus, but rye is more plentiful because conditions are too harsh for growing wheat. To show hospitality, a host traditionally presents an offering of bread and salt when greeting a guest or visitor.<ref>Canadian Citizenship and Immigration - [http://www.cp-pc.ca/english/belarus/eating.html Cultures Profile Project - Eating the Belarusian Way]. Published in 1998. Retrieved March 21, 2007.</ref> Popular drinks in Belarus include Russian wheat vodka and ''[[kvass]]'', a soft drink made from malted brown bread or rye flour. ''Kvass'' may also be combined with sliced vegetables to create a cold soup called ''okroshka''.<ref>University of Nebraska-Lincoln - Institute of Agriculture and National Resources. [http://www.ianr.unl.edu/kendrick/411/people-S00.html Situation and Outlook - People and Their Diets]. Published in April 2000. Retrieved March 21, 2007.</ref>
 
 
 
Belarus has four [[World Heritage Sites]]: the [[Mir Castle Complex]], the [[Niasvizh Castle]], the [[Belovezhskaya Pushcha]] (shared with [[Poland]]), and the [[Struve Geodetic Arc]] (shared with nine other countries).<ref name="UNSECO">{{cite web| url=http://whc.unesco.org/en/statesparties/by| title=Belarus - UNESCO World Heritage Centre| accessdate=2006-03-26}}</ref>
 
  
[[Image:State TV Belarus.jpg|thumb|Broadcasting center of state-run TV in Minsk]]
+
Belarusian [[literature]] began with eleventh- to thirteenth-century religious writing; of which the work of twelfth-century poet [[Kiryla Turauski]] is representative. Rhyming was common in these works, which were generally written in [[Old Belarusian language|Old Belarusian]], [[Latin]], Polish or [[Church-Slavic]]. By the sixteenth century, [[Polatsk]] resident [[Francysk Skaryna]] translated the [[Bible]] into Belarusian. It was published in [[Prague]] and [[Vilnius]] between 1517 and 1525, making it the first book printed in Belarus or anywhere in Eastern Europe. The modern period of Belarusian literature began in the late nineteenth century; one important writer was [[Yanka Kupala]]. Many of the writers at the time, such as [[Uładzimir Žyłka]], [[Kazimir Svayak]], [[Yakub Kolas]], [[Źmitrok Biadula]] and [[Maksim Haretski]], wrote for a Belarusian language paper called ''Nasha Niva,'' published in [[Vilnius]].  
The largest media holding group in Belarus is the state-owned [[National State Teleradiocompany]]. It operates several television and radio stations that broadcast content domestically and internationally, either through traditional signals or the Internet.<ref>National State Teleradiocompany [http://www.tvr.by/eng/about.asp About us]. Retrieved October 5, 2007.</ref> The Television Broadcasting Network is one of the major independent television stations in Belarus, mostly showing regional programming. Several [[List of newspapers in Belarus|newspapers]], printed either in Belarusian or Russian, provide general information or special interest content, such as business, politics or sports. In 1998, there were fewer than 100 radio stations in Belarus: 28 [[AM broadcasting|AM]], 37 [[FM broadcasting|FM]] and 11 [[shortwave]] stations.<ref name="communication">{{cite web |url=https://www.cia.gov/library/publications/the-world-factbook/geos/bo.html#Comm |title=CIA World Factbook (2007) - Belarus - Communications |accessdate=2007-10-04}}</ref>
 
  
[[Image:Talk show zhodino.jpg|thumb|left|Private TV company in [[Zhodzina|Zhodino]] records a talk-show in a local night club, 2002]]
+
Belarus experienced long periods of foreign control throughout its history during which periods
All media companies are regulated by the Law On Press and Other Mass Media, passed on January 13, 1995.<ref name="presslaw">Law of the Republic of Belarus [http://www.law.by/work/EnglPortal.nsf/6e1a652fbefce34ac2256d910056d559/1f80c30387b1623dc2256dc00051dc63?OpenDocument Law On Press and Other Mass Media]. Retrieved October 5 2007.</ref> This grants the freedom of press; however, Article 5 states that slander cannot be made against the president of Belarus or other officials outlined in the national constitution.<ref name="presslaw"/>
+
considerable efforts were made to suppress both its [[language]] and [[culture]]. While under Soviet control free development of literature occurred only in Belarus' Polish-held territory. A number of poets and authors went into exile while the country was under Nazi occupation and returned only in the 1960s. The last major revival of the Belarusian literature occurred in the 1960s with novels published by [[Vasil Bykaŭ]] and [[Uładzimir Karatkievič]].
The Belarusian Government has since been criticized for acting against media outlets. Newspapers such as ''[[Nasa Niva]]'' and the ''Belaruskaya Delovaya Gazeta'' have been targeted for closure by the authorities after they published reports critical of President Lukashenko or other government officials.<ref>Eurozine [http://www.eurozine.com/articles/2006-04-19-newsitem-en.html Independent Belarusian newspaper "Nasha Niva" to close]. Published April 19, 2006.</ref><ref>United States Department of States [http://www.state.gov/r/pa/prs/ps/2003/21094.htm Media Freedom in Belarus]. Press release by Philip T. Reeker. Published May 30, 2003.</ref> The OSCE and [[Freedom House]] have commented regarding the loss of press freedom in Belarus. In 2005, Freedom House gave Belarus a score of 6.75 (not free) when it came to dealing with press freedom. Another issue for the Belarusian press is the unresolved disappearance of several journalists.<ref>Freedom House [http://www.freedomhouse.org/template.cfm?page=47&nit=358&year=2005 Country Report - Belarus]. Published 2005. Reviewed October 6, 2007.</ref>
 
{{-}}
 
  
 +
In the seventeenth century, Polish composer [[Stanislaw Moniuszko]] composed operas and chamber music pieces while living in Minsk. During his stay, he worked with Belarusian poet [[Vincent Dunin-Marcinkevich]] and created the opera ''Sielanka'' ''(Peasant Woman).'' At the end of the nineteenth century, major Belarusian cities formed their own [[opera]] and [[ballet]] companies. The ballet ''[[Nightingale (ballet)|Nightingale]]'' by M. Kroshner was composed during the Soviet era and became the first Belarusian ballet showcased at the National Academic Bolshoi Ballet Theatre in [[Minsk]]. After the "Great Patriotic War" of 1941 to 1945, [[music]] focused on the hardships of the Belarusian people or on those who took up arms in defense of the homeland. During this period, A. Bogatyryov, creator of the opera ''In Polesye Virgin Forest,'' served as the "tutor" of Belarusian composers. The National Academic Theatre of Ballet, in Minsk, was awarded the Benois de la Dance Prize in 1996 as the top [[ballet]] company in the world. Although [[rock music]] has risen in popularity in recent years, the Belarusian government has suppressed the development of popular music through various legal and economic mechanisms.
  
 +
The traditional two piece Belarusian dress originated from the [[Kievan Rus']] period, and continues to be worn today at special functions. Because of the cool climate, the [[clothes]] were made of [[Textile|fabric]]s that provided closed covering and warmth, such as [[flax]] or [[wool]]. The Belarusian nobles usually had their fabrics imported and chose the colors of red, blue or green. The clothing is decorated with ornate patterns influenced by the neighboring cultures: [[Poland|Poles]], [[Lithuania]]ns, [[Latvia]]ns, [[Russia]]ns, and other European nations. Each region of Belarus has developed specific design patterns. An ornamental pattern used on some early dresses is currently used to decorate the hoist of the Belarusian national flag, adopted in a disputed referendum in 1995.
  
 
==Notes==
 
==Notes==
{{reflist|3}}
+
<references/>
  
 
==References==
 
==References==
* Zaprudnik, Jan. 1993. ''Belarus: at a crossroads in history''. Westview series on the post-Soviet republics. Boulder: Westview Press. ISBN 0813317940 and ISBN 9780813317946
+
* Birgerson, Susanne Michele. ''After the breakup of a multi-ethnic empire: Russia, successor states, and Eurasian security.'' Westport, CT: Praeger, 2002. ISBN 0275969657
*cite book | last = Robinson | first = Charles Henry | authorlink = | coauthors = | title = The Conversion of Europe | publisher = Longmans, Green | date= 1917 |
+
* ''CIA World Factbook''. [https://www.cia.gov/library/publications/the-world-factbook/geos/bo.html Belarus] June 2008.Retrieved August 26, 2019.
* {{cite book | last = Lerski | first = George Jan | authorlink = | coauthors = Aleksander Gieysztor | title = Historical Dictionary of Poland, 966–1945 | publisher = Greenwood Press | date= 1996 | location = | pages = 181–182 | url = | doi = | id = | isbn = 0313260079 
+
* ''Eastern Europe, Russia and Central Asia 2003. Regional surveys of the world.'' London: Europa, 2002. ISBN 1857431375
* Edited by Michael Jones | first = | authorlink = | coauthors =Albert Rigaudière, Jeremy Catto, S. C. Rowell and others | title = The New Cambridge Medieval History (Vol.6) | publisher = Cambridge University Press| date= 2005 | location = | pages = p.710 | url = | doi = | id = | isbn = 0521362903 }}
+
* Fedor, Helen, ed. ''Belarus: A Country Study.'' Washington: GPO for the Library of Congress, 1995. Online: [http://countrystudies.us/belarus/ Belarus] ''Library of Congress''. Retrieved August 26, 2019.
* {{cite web|url=http://www.ruf.rice.edu/~sarmatia/197/Nowak.html |title=The Russo-Polish Historical Confrontation |accessdate=2007-12-22 |last=Nowak |first=Andrzej |date=1997-01-01 |work=Sarmatian Review XVII |publisher=[[Rice University]]
+
* Jones, Michael. ''The New Cambridge Medieval History. Volume VI, c.1300-c.1415.'' Cambridge: Cambridge University Press, 2000. ISBN 0521362903  
* <>{{cite book | last = Scheuch | first = E. K. | authorlink = | coauthors = David Sciulli | title = Societies, Corporations and the Nation State | publisher = BRILL | date= 2000 | location = | pages = 187 | url = | doi = | id = | isbn = 9004116648 
+
* Lerski, Jerzy J., Piotr Wróbel, and Richard J. Kozicki. ''Historical Dictionary of Poland, 966-1945.'' Westport, CT: Greenwood Press, 1996. ISBN 0313260079
* <>{{cite book | last = Birgerson | first = Susanne Michele | authorlink = | coauthors = | title = After the Breakup of a Multi-Ethnic Empire | publisher = Praeger/Greenwood | date= 2002 | location = | pages = 101 | url = | doi = | id = | isbn = 0275969657 }}</>
+
* Nowak, Andrzej. [http://www.ruf.rice.edu/~sarmatia/197/Nowak.html The Russo-Polish Historical Confrontation] ''Rice University - Sarmatian Review XVII.'' 1997. Retrieved August 26, 2019.
* <{{cite web|url=http://countrystudies.us/belarus/39.htm |title=Belarus - Prelude to Independence |accessdate=2007-12-22 |last=Fedor |first=Helen |date=1995 |work=Belarus: A Country Study |publisher=[[Library of Congress]] }}</>
+
* Robinson, Charles H. ''The Conversion of Europe.'' London: Longmans, Green. online [http://books.google.com/books?hl=en&id=OrRAAAAAIAAJ&dq=The+Conversion+of+Europe+Robinson&printsec=frontcover&source=web&ots=xOqKaONgCD&sig=AtNTHO6wCylEkbYx0k3WOxytMLo&sa=X&oi=book_result&resnum=1&ct=result] ''googlebooks''. 1917. Retrieved August 26, 2019.
*  Bell | first = Imogen | authorlink = | coauthors = | title = Eastern Europe, Russia and Central Asia 2003 | publisher = Taylor & Francis | date = 2002 | location = | pages = 132 | url = | doi = | id = | isbn = 1857431375
+
* Scheuch, Erwin K., and David Sciulli. ''The annals of the International Institute of Sociology: Societies, corporations, and the nation state v. 7.'' Leiden: Brill, 2000. ISBN 9004116648
* Cite web|url=https://www.cia.gov/library/publications/the-world-factbook/geos/bo.html#Geo|title=Belarus - Geography|accessdate=2007-11-07|publisher=Central Intelligence Agency|year=2007|work=The World Factbook}}
+
* ''U.S. Department of State''. [http://www.state.gov/r/pa/ei/bgn/5371.htm Background Note: Belarus] Retrieved August 26, 2019.
* |url=http://countrystudies.us/belarus/36.htm|title=Belarus - Exports|accessdate=2007-11-04|year=1994|author=Library of Congress|work=Country Studies
+
* Zaprudnik, Jan. ''Belarus: at a Crossroads in History.'' Westview series on the post-Soviet republics. Boulder: Westview Press, 1993. ISBN 0813317940
* <>Library of Congress Country Studies [http://countrystudies.us/belarus/20.htm Belarus - Religion]. Retrieved July 9, 2007.</>
 
  
 
==External links==
 
==External links==
All links Retrieved June 25, 2008.
+
All links retrieved September 27, 2023.  
{{portal|Belarus|Flag of Belarus.svg}}
 
{{sisterlinks|Belarus}}
 
 
 
* [https://www.cia.gov/library/publications/the-world-factbook/geos/bo.html Belarus]
 
 
 
  
 +
* [http://www.belarusguide.com/main/index.html The Virtual Guide to Belarus]
 +
* [https://www.cia.gov/the-world-factbook/countries/belarus/ Belarus] CIA ''World Factbook''
  
 
{{Countries of Europe}}
 
{{Countries of Europe}}
 
{{Commonwealth of Independent States (CIS)|state=collapsed}}
 
{{Commonwealth of Independent States (CIS)|state=collapsed}}
 
{{Eurasian Economic Community (EURASEC)}}
 
{{Eurasian Economic Community (EURASEC)}}
{{Non-Aligned Movement}}
 
  
  
<!--Categories—>
 
 
[[Category:Geography]]
 
[[Category:Geography]]
 
[[Category:Countries]]
 
[[Category:Countries]]
 
[[Category:History]]
 
[[Category:History]]
 +
[[Category:Europe]]
  
 
+
{{credit|Belarus|221529638|Economy_of_Belarus|222136269|Belarusian_culture|222474550}}
{{credit|221529638}}
 

Latest revision as of 08:51, 27 September 2023


Рэспубліка Беларусь
Республика Беларусь
Republic of Belarus
Flag of Belarus National emblem of Belarus
AnthemМы, беларусы (Belarusian)
My, Belarusy (transliteration)
We Belarusians

Location of Belarus
Location of  Belarus (orange)
on the European continent (white)  —  [Legend]
Capital
(and largest city)
Minsk
53°55′N 27°33′E
Official languages Belarusian
Russian
Ethnic groups (2009) 83.7% Belarusians,
8.3% Russians,
3.1% Poles,
1.7% Ukrainians, 4.2% others and unspecified
Demonym Belarusian
Government Presidential republic
 -  President Alexander Lukashenko
 -  Prime Minister Mikhail Myasnikovich
Independence from the Soviet Union 
 -  Declared 27 July 1990 
 -  Established 25 August 1991 
 -  Completed 25 December 1991 
Area
 -  Total 207,595 km² (85th)
80,155 sq mi 
 -  Water (%) negligible (2.830 km2)1
Population
 -  2009 census 9,503,807 (86th)
 -  Density 45.8/km² (142nd)
120.8/sq mi
GDP (PPP) 2010 estimate
 -  Total $131.201 billion[1] 
 -  Per capita $13,909[1] 
GDP (nominal) 2010 estimate
 -  Total $54.713 billion[1] 
 -  Per capita $5,800[1] 
Gini (2005) 27.9[2] (low
Currency Belarusian ruble (BYR)
Time zone EET (UTC+2)
 -  Summer (DST) EEST (UTC+3)
Internet TLD .by
Calling code [[+375]]
1 FAO's Information System on Water and Agriculture. FAO. Retrieved 4 April 2008.


Belarus (Belarusian and Russian: Беларусь, transliteration: Byelarus’, Polish: Białoruś) is a landlocked country in Eastern Europe that borders Russia to the north and east, Ukraine to the south, Poland to the west, and Lithuania and Latvia to the north. Its capital is Minsk; other major cities include Brest, Grodno, Gomel, Mogilev and Vitebsk. A third of the country is forested, and its strongest economic sectors are agriculture and manufacturing.

The history of Belarus is a story of domination by foreign powers, forced division and re-unification of the land, devastation during war and authoritarian rule following its 1991 independence.

The final unification of Belarusian lands within its modern borders took place in 1939, when the ethnically Belarusian lands that were part of interwar Poland were annexed by the USSR and attached to the Soviet Belarus. The territory and its nation were devastated in World War II, during which Belarus lost about a third of its population and more than half of its economic resources. After seven decades as a constituent republic of the USSR, Belarus declared its sovereignty on July 27, 1990, and independence from the Soviet Union on August 25, 1991. It has retained closer political and economic ties to Russia than any of the other former Soviet republics.

Its president since 1994, Alexander Lukashenko, has retained Soviet-era policies, such as state ownership of the economy, despite objections from Western governments. Government restrictions on freedom of speech, press and religion, as well as of peaceful assembly, continue into the twenty-first century. Because of its failure to protect labor rights, Belarus lost its European Union Generalized System of Preferences status in June 2007. It has been cited as a country of concern by both Amnesty International and Human Rights Watch.

Etymology

The name Belarus derives from the term White Russia, which first appeared in German and Latin medieval literature. The Latin term for the area was Russia Alba. Historically, the country was referred to in English as White Russia. Some sources translate the term as White Ruthenia, which can be used to describe either the area of Eastern Europe populated by Slavic people or the states that occupied the area. The first known use of White Russia to refer to Belarus was in the late-sixteenth century by Englishman Sir Jerome Horsey. During the seventeenth century, Russian tsars used White Rus', asserting that they were trying to recapture their heritage from the Polish-Lithuanian Commonwealth.

Belarus was named Belorussia (Russian: Белоруссия) in the days of Imperial Russia, and the Russian tsar was usually styled Tsar of All the Russias—Great, Little, and White. Belorussia was the only Russian language name of the country until 1991, when the Supreme Soviet of the Belorussian Soviet Socialist Republic decreed by law that the new independent republic should be called Belarus (Беларусь) in Russian and in all other language transcriptions of that name. The change was made to reflect adequately the Belarusian language form of the name.[3] Accordingly, the name Belorussia was replaced by Belarus in English, and, to some extent, in Russian, although the traditional name still persists in that language as well.

Geography

Vaskowskae reservoir

The country of Belarus covers 80,100 square miles (207,600 sq km), slightly smaller than the U.S. state of Kansas. It is landlocked, relatively flat, and contains large tracts of marshy land. According to a 1994 estimate by the United Nations Food and Agricultural Organization, 34 percent of Belarus was at that time covered by forests. Many streams and 11,000 lakes are found in Belarus. Three major rivers run through the country: the Neman, the Pripyat, and the Dnepr. The Neman flows westward toward the Baltic Sea and the Pripyat flows eastward to the Dnepr; the Dnepr flows southward towards the Black Sea. Belarus's highest point is Dzyarzhynskaya Hara (Dzyarzhynsk Hill) at 1132 feet (345 meters), and its lowest point is on the Neman River at 295 feet (90 meters).

The climate ranges from harsh winters, with average January temperatures at −6 °C (21.2 °F), to cool and moist summers with an average temperature of 18 °C (64 °F). Belarus has an average annual rainfall of 21.7 to 27.5 inches (550 to 700 mm). The country experiences a yearly transition from a continental climate to a maritime climate.

Białowieża National Park

Belarus's natural resources include peat deposits, small quantities of oil and natural gas, granite, dolomite (limestone), marl, chalk, sand, gravel, and clay.

Approximately 70 percent of the radiation from neighboring Ukraine's 1986 Chernobyl nuclear disaster entered Belarusian territory, and as of 2005 about a fifth of Belarusian land (principally farmland and forests in the southeastern provinces) continued to be affected by radiation fallout.[4] The United Nations and other agencies have aimed to reduce the level of radiation in affected areas, especially through the use of caesium binders and rapeseed cultivation, which are meant to decrease soil levels of caesium-137. [5][6]

Belarus is bordered by Latvia on the north, Lithuania to the northwest, Poland to the west, Russia to the north and east and Ukraine to the south. Treaties in 1995 and 1996 demarcated Belarus's borders with Latvia and Lithuania, but Belarus failed to ratify a 1997 treaty establishing the Belarus-Ukraine border. Belarus and Lithuania ratified final border demarcation documents in February 2007.[7]

Belarus has four World Heritage Sites: the Mir Castle Complex, the Niasvizh Castle, the Białowieża Forest (shared with Poland), and the Struve Geodetic Arc (shared with nine other countries).[8] While three of these are cultural sites, the Białowieża Forest is an ancient woodland straddling the border between Belarus and Poland. It is the only remaining part of the immense forest which once spread across the European Plain.

History

Map of the Grand Duchy of Lithuania and the Kingdom of Poland in the Polish-Lithuanian Commonwealth, 1619

While archaeological evidence points to settlement in today's Belarus at least ten thousand years ago, recorded history begins with settlement by Baltic and Slavic tribes in the sixth century. They gradually came into contact with the Varangians, a band of warriors consisting of Scandinavians and Slavs from the Baltics. Though defeated and briefly exiled by the local population, the Varangians were later asked to return and helped to form a polity—commonly referred to as the Kievan Rus'—in exchange for tribute. The Kievan Rus' state began in about 862 at the present-day city of Novgorod.[9]

Upon the death of Kievan Rus' ruler, Prince Yaroslav the Wise, (r. 1019 to 1054) the state split into independent principalities. These Ruthenian principalities were badly affected by a Mongol invasion in the thirteenth century, and many were later incorporated into the Grand Duchy of Lithuania. Of the principalities held by the Duchy, nine were settled by ancestors of the Belarusian people. During this time, the Duchy was involved in several military campaigns, including fighting on the side of Poland against the Teutonic Knights at the Battle of Grunwald in 1410; the joint victory allowed the Duchy to control the northwestern border lands of Eastern Europe.

On February 2, 1386, the Grand Duchy of Lithuania and the Kingdom of Poland were joined in a personal union through a marriage of their rulers. This union set in motion the developments that eventually resulted in the formation of the Polish-Lithuanian Commonwealth, created in 1569. The Russians, led by Tsar Ivan the III, began military conquests in 1486 in an attempt to gain the Kievan Rus' lands, specifically Belarus and Ukraine. The union between Poland and Lithuania ended in 1795, and the commonwealth was partitioned by Imperial Russia, Prussia, and Austria, dividing Belarus. Belarusian territories were acquired by the Russian Empire during the reign of Catherine II and held until their occupation by Germany during World War I.

Map of the Russian Empire, 1762–1801

During the negotiations of the Treaty of Brest-Litovsk, Belarus first declared independence on March 25, 1918, forming the Belarusian People's Republic. The Germans supported the BPR, which lasted for about ten months. Soon after the Germans were defeated, the BPR fell under the influence of the Bolsheviks and the Red Army and became the Byelorussian Soviet Socialist Republic in 1919. After Russian occupation of eastern and northern Lithuania, it was merged into the Lithuanian-Byelorussian Soviet Socialist Republic. Byelorussian lands were then split between Poland and the Soviets after the Polish-Soviet War ended in 1921, and the recreated Byelorussian SSR became a founding member of the Union of Soviet Socialist Republics in 1922.

In September 1939, as a result of the Molotov-Ribbentrop Pact, the Soviet Union invaded Poland and annexed its eastern lands, including most Polish-held Byelorussian land. Nazi Germany invaded the Soviet Union in 1941. Byelorussia was the hardest hit Soviet Republic in the war and remained in Nazi hands until 1944. During that time, Germany destroyed 209 out of 290 cities in the republic, 85 percent of the republic's industry, and more than one million buildings, while causing human losses estimated between two and three million (about a quarter to one-third of the total population). The Jewish population of Byelorussia was devastated during the Holocaust and never recovered.

The population of Belarus did not regain its pre-war level until 1971. After the war ended, Byelorussia was among the 51 founding countries of the United Nations Charter in 1945 and began rebuilding the Soviet Republic. During this time, the Byelorussian SSR became a major center of manufacturing in the western region of the USSR, increasing jobs and bringing an influx of ethnic Russians into the republic. The borders of Byelorussian SSR and Poland were redrawn to a point known as the Curzon Line.

Map of the Byelorussian SSR, 1940

Joseph Stalin implemented a policy of Sovietization to isolate the Byelorussian SSR from Western influences as well as to replace Belarus's cultural identity with that of Russia. This policy involved sending Russians from various parts of the Soviet Union and placing them in key positions in the Byelorussian SSR government. The official use of the Belarusian language and other cultural aspects were limited by Moscow. Following Stalin's death in 1953, successor Nikita Khrushchev continued this program, stating, "The sooner we all start speaking Russian, the faster we shall build communism."[10] When Soviet leader Mikhail Gorbachev began pushing through his reform plan, the Belarusian people delivered a petition to him in December 1986 explaining the loss of their culture.

In June 1988 at the rural site of Kurapaty near Minsk, archaeologist Zianon Pazniak, the leader of Christian Conservative Party of the BPF, discovered mass graves which contained about 250,000 bodies of victims executed in the period 1937-1941. Some nationalists contend that this discovery is proof that the Soviet government was trying to erase the Belarusian people, causing Belarusian nationalists to seek independence.

A banner displayed by Belarusian students near Warsaw University showing support for Belarusian independence

Two years later, in March 1990, elections for seats in the Supreme Soviet of the Byelorussian SSR took place. Though the pro-independence Belarusian Popular Front took only 10 percent of the seats, the populace was content with the selection of the delegates. Belarus declared itself sovereign on July 27, 1990, by issuing the Declaration of State Sovereignty of the Belarusian Soviet Socialist Republic. With the support of the Communist Party, the country's name was changed to the Republic of Belarus on August 25, 1991. Stanislav Shushkevich, the Chairman of the Supreme Soviet of Belarus, met with Boris Yeltsin of Russia and Leonid Kravchuk of Ukraine on December 8, 1991 in Belavezhskaya Pushcha to formally declare the dissolution of the Soviet Union and the formation of the Commonwealth of Independent States. A national constitution was adopted in March 1994, in which the functions of prime minister were given to the president.

Two-round elections for the presidency on June 24 and July 10, 1994 resulted in the politically unknown Alexander Lukashenko winning more than 45 percent of the vote in the first round and 80 percent in the second round, beating Vyacheslav Kebich who got 14 percent. Lukashenko was re-elected in 2001 and in 2006.

Government and politics

Victory Square, Minsk

Belarus is a presidential republic, governed by a president and the National Assembly. In accordance with the constitution, the president is elected once in five years. The National Assembly is a bicameral parliament comprising the 110-member House of Representatives (the lower house) and the 64-member Council of the Republic (the upper house). The House of Representatives has the power to appoint the prime minister, make constitutional amendments, call for a vote of confidence on the prime minister, and make suggestions on foreign and domestic policy. The Council of the Republic has the power to select various government officials, conduct an impeachment trial of the president, and accept or reject the bills passed by the House of Representatives. Each chamber has the ability to veto any law passed by local officials if it is contrary to the Constitution of Belarus. The government includes a Council of Ministers, headed by the prime minister. The members of this council need not be members of the legislature and are appointed by the president. The judiciary comprises the Supreme Court and specialized courts such as the Constitutional Court, which deals with specific issues related to constitutional and business law. The judges of national courts are appointed by the president and confirmed by the Council of the Republic. For criminal cases, the highest court of appeal is the Supreme Court. The Belarusian Constitution forbids the use of special extra-judicial courts.

In 2007, 98 of the 110 members of the House of Representatives were not affiliated with any political party and of the remaining twelve members, eight belonged to the Communist Party of Belarus, three to the Agrarian Party of Belarus, and one to the Liberal Democratic Party of Belarus. Most of the non-partisans represent a wide scope of social organizations such as workers' collectives, public associations and civil society organizations.

Human rights and freedom

Broadcasting center of state-run TV in Minsk

Groups such as the Organization for Security and Co-operation in Europe (OSCE) declared the 2004 presidential election "un-free" because of the opposition parties' poor results and media bias in favor of the government. In the country's 2006 presidential election, Lukashenko was opposed by Alaksandar Milinkievič, a candidate representing a coalition of opposition parties, and by Alaksandar Kazulin of the Social Democrats. Kazulin was detained and beaten by police during protests surrounding the All Belarusian People's Assembly. Lukashenko won the election with 80 percent of the vote, but the OSCE and other organizations called the election unfair.

Alexander Lukashenko, who has been the president of Belarus since 1994, has described himself as having an "authoritarian ruling style."[11] Western countries have described Belarus under Lukashenko as a dictatorship, while the government has accused the same Western powers of trying to oust Lukashenko.[12]

The Council of Europe has barred Belarus from European Union membership since 1997 for undemocratic voting and election irregularities in the November 1996 constitutional referendum and parliament bi-elections.[13]

The Belarusian government is also criticized for human rights violations and its actions against non-governmental organizations, independent journalists, national minorities, and opposition politicians.[14] [15]

Belarus is the only nation in Europe that retains the death penalty for certain crimes during times of peace as well as times of war. In testimony to the U.S. Senate Committee on Foreign Relations, United States Secretary of State Condoleezza Rice labeled Belarus among the six nations of the "outposts of tyranny."[16]

All media companies are regulated by the Law On Press and Other Mass Media, passed on January 13, 1995. This grants freedom of press; however, Article 5 states that slander cannot be made against the president of Belarus or other officials outlined in the national constitution. The Belarusian Government has since been criticized for acting against media outlets. Newspapers such as Nasa Niva and the Belaruskaya Delovaya Gazeta were targeted for closure by the authorities after they published reports critical of President Lukashenko or other government officials.[17] The Organization for Security and Co-operation in Europe and Freedom House have commented regarding the loss of press freedom in Belarus. In 2005, Freedom House gave Belarus a score of 6.75 (not free) when it came to dealing with press freedom. Another issue for the Belarusian press is the unresolved disappearance of several journalists.[18]

Foreign relations and military

Belarus and Russia have been close trading partners and diplomatic allies since the breakup of the Soviet Union. Belarus is dependent on Russia for imports of raw materials and for its export market. The Union of Russia and Belarus, a supranational confederation, was established in a 1996–1999 series of treaties that called for monetary union, equal rights, single citizenship, and a common foreign and defense policy. Although the future of the Union was in doubt because of Belarus' repeated delays of monetary union, the lack of a referendum date for the draft constitution, and a 2006–2007 dispute about petroleum trade, on December 11, 2007, reports emerged that a framework for the new state had been discussed between both countries.[19] On May 27, 2008, Belarusian President Lukashenko said that he had named Russian Prime Minister Vladimir Putin the "prime minister" of the Russia-Belarus alliance. The meaning of the move was not immediately clear; however, there is speculation that Putin may become president of a unified state of Russia and Belarus after having stepped down as Russian president in May 2008.[20]

Belarus was a founding member of the Commonwealth of Independent States (CIS). The country has trade agreements with several European Union member states (despite other member states' travel ban on Lukashenko and top officials), as well as with its neighbors Lithuania, Poland and Latvia.

Bilateral relations with the United States are strained because of the U.S. Department of State's support for various pro-democracy NGOs and because the Belarusian government has made it harder for US-based organizations to operate within the country. The 2004 US Belarus Democracy Act continued this trend, authorizing funding for pro-democracy Belarusian NGOs and forbidding loans to the Belarusian government except for humanitarian purposes.[21] Despite this, the two nations cooperate on intellectual property protection, prevention of human trafficking and technology crime, and disaster relief.

Belarus has increased cooperation with China, strengthened by the visit of President Lukashenko to that country in October 2005. Belarus has strong ties with Syria, which President Lukashenko considers a key partner in the Middle East. In addition to the CIS, Belarus has membership in the Eurasian Economic Community and the Collective Security Treaty Organization. Belarus has been a member of the international Non-Aligned Movement since 1998 and a member of the United Nations since its founding in 1945.

Military

Belarus' Armed Forces, which were formed in 1992 using parts of the former Soviet Armed Forces, consists of three branches: the Army, the Air Force, and the Ministry of Defense joint staff. The transformation of the ex-Soviet forces into the Armed Forces of Belarus, which was completed in 1997, reduced the number of its soldiers by 30,000 and restructured its leadership and military formations.

Most of Belarus's service members are conscripts, who serve for 12 months if they have higher education or 18 months if they do not. However, demographic decreases in the Belarusians of conscription age have increased the importance of contract soldiers, who numbered 12,000 in 2001.

In 2005, approximately 1.4 percent of Belarus's gross domestic product was devoted to military expenditures.[22] Belarus has not expressed a desire to join NATO but has participated in the Individual Partnership Program since 1997.

Provinces and districts

Provinces of Belarus

Belarus is divided into six voblasts, or administrative division (provinces), which are named after the cities that serve as their administrative centers. Each voblast has a provincial legislative authority, called an oblsovet. which is elected by the voblast's residents, and a provincial executive authority called a voblast administration, whose leader is appointed by the president. Voblasts are further subdivided into raions (commonly translated as districts or regions). As with voblasts, each raion has its own legislative authority (raisovet, or raion council) elected by its residents, and an executive authority (raion administration) appointed by higher executive powers. As of 2002, there are six voblasts, 118 raions, 102 towns and 108 urbanized settlements. Minsk is given a special status, due to the city serving as the national capital. Minsk City is run by an executive committee and granted a charter of self-rule by the national government.

Voblasts (with administrative centers):

  1. Brest Voblast (Brest)
  2. Homel Voblast (Homel)
  3. Hrodna Voblast (Hrodna)
  4. Mahilyow Voblast (Mahilyow)
  5. Minsk Voblast (Minsk)
  6. Vitsebsk Voblast (Vitsebsk)

Special administrative district:

  1. Minsk City

Economy

A Belarusian-made tractor being used to farm

Following the collapse of the Soviet Union all former Soviet republics faced a deep economic crisis. Belarus' path of overcoming this crisis was "market socialism," launched by Alexander Lukashenko following his 1994 election to the presidency. In keeping with this policy, administrative controls over prices and currency exchange rates were introduced. Also the state's right to intervene in the management of private enterprise was expanded, but on March 4, 2008, the President issued a decree abolishing the golden share rule in a clear movement to improve its international rating regarding foreign investment.

As part of the former Soviet Union, Belarus had a relatively well-developed industrial base which it retained even after the break-up of the U.S.S.R. The country also has a broad agricultural base and a high education level. Among the former republics of the Soviet Union, it had one of the highest standards of living. However, the country had to face the difficult challenge of moving from a state-run economy with high priority on military production and heavy industry to a civilian, free-market system.

After an initial outburst of capitalist reform from 1991-1994, including privatization of state enterprises, creation of institutions of private property, and entrepreneurship, Belarus under Lukashenko has greatly slowed its pace of privatization and other market reforms, emphasizing the need for a "socially oriented market economy." About 80 percent of all industry remains in state hands, and foreign investment has been hindered by a climate hostile to business. Banks, which had been privatized after independence, were re-nationalized under Lukashenko.

Economic output, which declined for several years, revived somewhat in the late 1990s, but the economy remains dependent on Russian subsidies. Until 2000, subsidies to state enterprises and price controls on industrial and consumer staples constituted a major feature of the Belarusian economy. Inflationary monetary practices, including the printing of money also has been regularly used to finance real sector growth and to cover the payment of salaries and pensions.

In addition to the burdens imposed by high inflation, businesses have been subject to pressure on the part of central and local governments including arbitrary changes in regulations, numerous rigorous inspections, and retroactive application of new business regulations which prohibit formerly legal practices.

Belarusian GDP growth since 1995 and estimate for 2008

As the Belarusian economy is closely tied to Russia's economy, the latter's financial crisis of 1998 hit Belarus nearly equally as hard. In the 1990s poverty became a significant problem. Research carried out in Belarus in 1996 under the support of the World Bank showed that the number of poor had sharply increased; from 5 percent in 1992 to 22 percent by 1995. According to official statistics, 26.7 percent of urban population and 33.6 percent of rural population were below the poverty line in 2001.[23][24][25]

However, efforts by the Belarusian government and some favorable factors such as the union with Russia which opened vast markets for Belarusian goods and also allowed Belarus to buy oil and gas at Russia's internal price, allowed Belarus to bypass the severe economic hardships and crises that many former Soviet Union transition economies encountered. It resulted in the economic growth seen in recent years. According to the United Nations' World Economic Situation and Prospects 2006 report Belarus registers major economic growth: GDP growth rate as low as 3 percent in 1999 showed 11 percent (2nd place in CIS) in 2004 and 8.5 percent (4th place after Azerbaijan and Kazakhstan - oil and gas exporters - and Armenia) in 2005. In terms of GDP growth rate Belarus also outperforms neighboring Poland, Latvia and Lithuania.

Obverse of the 500 Belarusian ruble (BYB/BYR), the national currency

Peat, the country's most valuable resource, is used for fuel and fertilizer and in the chemical industry. Belarus also has deposits of clay, sand, chalk, dolomite, phosphorite, and rock and potassium salt. Forests cover approximately a third of the land, and lumbering is an important occupation. Potatoes, flax, hemp, sugarbeets, rye, oats, and wheat are the chief agricultural products. Dairy and beef cattle, pigs, and chickens are raised. Belarus has only small reserves of petroleum and natural gas and imports most of its oil and gas from Russia. The main branches of industry produce tractors and trucks, earth movers for use in construction and mining, metal-cutting machine tools, agricultural equipment, motorcycles, chemicals, fertilizer, textiles, and consumer goods. The chief trading partners are Russia, Ukraine, Poland, and Germany.

Because of its failure to protect labor rights, Belarus lost its E.U. Generalized System of Preferences status on June 21, 2007, which raised tariff rates to their prior most-favored nation levels.[26] Belarus applied to become a member of the World Trade Organization in 1993.

The massive nuclear accident of April 26, 1986 at the Chernobyl nuclear power plant across the border in Ukraine, had a devastating effect on Belarus; as a result of the radiation release, agriculture in a large part of the country was destroyed, and many villages were abandoned. Resettlement and medical costs were substantial and long-term.

Demographics

Ethnic Belarusians constitute 81.2 percent of Belarus's total population. The next largest ethnic groups are Russians (11.4 percent), Poles (3.9 percent), and Ukrainians (2.4 percent). Belarus's two official languages are Belarusian and Russian, spoken at home by 36.7 percent and 62.8 percent of Belarusians, respectively. Minorities also speak Polish, Ukrainian and Eastern Yiddish.

Belarus has a population density of about 50 people per square kilometer (127 per sq mi); 71.7 percent of its total population is concentrated in urban areas. Minsk, the nation's capital and largest city, is home to 1,741,400 of Belarus's 9,724,700 residents. Gomel, with 481,000 people, is the second largest city and serves as the capital of the Homel Oblast. Other large cities are Mogilev (365,100), Vitebsk (342,400), Hrodna (314,800) and Brest (298,300).

Like many other European countries, Belarus has a negative population growth rate and a negative natural growth rate. In 2007, Belarus' population declined by 0.41 percent and its fertility rate was 1.22, well below the replacement rate. Its net migration rate is +0.38 per 1,000, indicating that Belarus experiences slightly more immigration than emigration. As of 2007, 69.7 percent of Belarus's population was aged 14 to 64; 16 percent was under 14, and 14.6 percent was 65 or older. Its population is also aging: while the current median age is 37, it is estimated that Belarusians' median age will be 51 in 2050. There are about 0.88 males per female in Belarus. The average life expectancy is 68.7 years (63.0 years for males and 74.9 years for females). Over 99 percent of Belarusians are literate.

Cathedral of Saint Sophia in Polotsk

Belarus has historically been a Russian Orthodox country, with minorities practicing Catholicism, Judaism, and other religions. Most Belarusians converted to the Russian Orthodox Church following Belarus' annexation by Russia after the partitions of the Polish-Lithuanian Commonwealth. Belarus's Roman Catholic minority, which makes up perhaps 10 percent of the country's population and is concentrated in the western part of the country, especially around Hrodna, is made up of a mixture of Belarusians and the country's Polish and Lithuanian minorities. About 1 percent belong to the Belarusian Greek Catholic Church. Belarus was once a major center of the European Jewish population, with 10 percent of its population being Jewish, but the population of Jews has been reduced by war, starvation, and the Holocaust to a tiny minority of about 1 percent or less. Emigration from Belarus has been an additional cause for the shrinking number of Jewish residents.

According to Article 16 of its Constitution, Belarus has no official religion. While the freedom of worship is granted in the same article, religious organizations that are deemed harmful to the government or social order of the country can be prohibited.

Culture

The Belarusian government sponsors annual cultural festivals including the Slavianski Bazaar in Vitebsk, which showcases Belarusian performers, artists, writers, musicians, and actors. Several state holidays, such as Independence Day and Victory Day, attract large crowds and often include displays such as fireworks and military parades, especially in Vitebsk and Minsk. The government's Ministry of Culture finances events promoting Belarusian arts and culture both inside and outside the country.

Much of Belarus' architectural heritage was destroyed during World War II, especially in Minsk. While the Minsk city center was rebuilt in the grandiose Stalinist style with its classical borrowings, older surviving parts of the country reflect period religious architecture. The Cathedral of Saint Sophia in Polatsk was built in the Eastern Orthodox style in the eleventh century. From the twelfth to sixteenth centuries buildings were constructed in stone fortress style. The Baroque style, linked to the eastward movement of the Roman Catholic Church, is evident in the Jesuit, Bernardine, and Bridgettine churches in Hrodna. Classical styles became popular in the eighteenth century, as seen in the Governor’s Palace in Hrodna.[27] Mir Castle, with its successive cultural influences (Gothic, Renaissance and Baroque) that blend to create an impressive monument recognized by UNESCO as a World Heritage Site. It is used for historical re-enactments to celebrate Medieval Belarus historical events and dancing.

Belarusian literature began with eleventh- to thirteenth-century religious writing; of which the work of twelfth-century poet Kiryla Turauski is representative. Rhyming was common in these works, which were generally written in Old Belarusian, Latin, Polish or Church-Slavic. By the sixteenth century, Polatsk resident Francysk Skaryna translated the Bible into Belarusian. It was published in Prague and Vilnius between 1517 and 1525, making it the first book printed in Belarus or anywhere in Eastern Europe. The modern period of Belarusian literature began in the late nineteenth century; one important writer was Yanka Kupala. Many of the writers at the time, such as Uładzimir Žyłka, Kazimir Svayak, Yakub Kolas, Źmitrok Biadula and Maksim Haretski, wrote for a Belarusian language paper called Nasha Niva, published in Vilnius.

Belarus experienced long periods of foreign control throughout its history during which periods considerable efforts were made to suppress both its language and culture. While under Soviet control free development of literature occurred only in Belarus' Polish-held territory. A number of poets and authors went into exile while the country was under Nazi occupation and returned only in the 1960s. The last major revival of the Belarusian literature occurred in the 1960s with novels published by Vasil Bykaŭ and Uładzimir Karatkievič.

In the seventeenth century, Polish composer Stanislaw Moniuszko composed operas and chamber music pieces while living in Minsk. During his stay, he worked with Belarusian poet Vincent Dunin-Marcinkevich and created the opera Sielanka (Peasant Woman). At the end of the nineteenth century, major Belarusian cities formed their own opera and ballet companies. The ballet Nightingale by M. Kroshner was composed during the Soviet era and became the first Belarusian ballet showcased at the National Academic Bolshoi Ballet Theatre in Minsk. After the "Great Patriotic War" of 1941 to 1945, music focused on the hardships of the Belarusian people or on those who took up arms in defense of the homeland. During this period, A. Bogatyryov, creator of the opera In Polesye Virgin Forest, served as the "tutor" of Belarusian composers. The National Academic Theatre of Ballet, in Minsk, was awarded the Benois de la Dance Prize in 1996 as the top ballet company in the world. Although rock music has risen in popularity in recent years, the Belarusian government has suppressed the development of popular music through various legal and economic mechanisms.

The traditional two piece Belarusian dress originated from the Kievan Rus' period, and continues to be worn today at special functions. Because of the cool climate, the clothes were made of fabrics that provided closed covering and warmth, such as flax or wool. The Belarusian nobles usually had their fabrics imported and chose the colors of red, blue or green. The clothing is decorated with ornate patterns influenced by the neighboring cultures: Poles, Lithuanians, Latvians, Russians, and other European nations. Each region of Belarus has developed specific design patterns. An ornamental pattern used on some early dresses is currently used to decorate the hoist of the Belarusian national flag, adopted in a disputed referendum in 1995.

Notes

  1. 1.0 1.1 1.2 1.3 Error on call to template:cite web: Parameters url and title must be specified. International Monetary Fund.
  2. Error on call to template:cite web: Parameters url and title must be specified. The World Factbook. CIA.
  3. Pravo - Law of the Republic of Belarus. Law of the Republic of Belarus (in Russian) Retrieved July 9, 2008.
  4. Sarah Rainsford. April 26, 2005. Belarus cursed by Chernobyl BBC News. Retrieved July 9, 2008.
  5. UN Office for the Coordination of Humanitarian Affairs. 2004. The United Nations and Chernobyl - The Republic of Belarus.
  6. Marilyn Smith. Ecological reservation in Belarus fosters new approaches to soil remediation International Atomic Energy Agency. Retrieved July 9, 2008.
  7. Lithuanian Ministry of Foreign Affairs. Lithuania's Cooperation with Belarus Retrieved July 9, 2008.
  8. UNESCO World Heritage Centre. Belarus Retrieved July 10, 2008.
  9. The foreign quarterly review. 1827. (London: Treuttel and Würtz, Treuttel, Jun, and Richter).
  10. Helen Fedor. 1995. Belarus - Stalin and Russification Library of Congress; Country Studies. Retrieved July 9, 2008.
  11. BBC News. January 9, 2007. Profile: Alexander Lukashenko Retrieved July 9, 2008.
  12. Stephen Mulvey. September 10, 2001. Profile: Europe's last dictator? BBC News. Retrieved July 9, 2008.
  13. Press Service of the Council of Europe. January 17, 1997. Belarus suspended from the Council of Europe Retrieved March 3, 2006.
  14. Human Rights Watch. 2005. Human Rights Overview - Belarus Retrieved July 9, 2008.
  15. Amnesty International. Republic of Belarus Retrieved July 9, 2008.
  16. Condoleezza Rice, January 18, 2005. Opening Statement by Dr. Condoleezza Rice, Senate Foreign Relations Committee U.S. Senate Committee on Foreign Relations. Retrieved July 9, 2008.
  17. Philip T. Reeker, May 30, 2003. Media Freedom in Belarus. U.S. Department of State. Retrieved July 11, 2008.
  18. Vitali Silitski, 2005. Country Report - Belarus. Freedom House. Retrieved July 11, 2008.
  19. AP, Reuters. December 10, 2007. Russia-Belarus Union Presidency Dismissed The Moscow Times. Retrieved July 9, 2008.
  20. Associated Press. May 27, 2008. Putin named PM of Belarus-Russia alliance MSNBC. Retrieved July 9, 2008.
  21. Bureau of International Information Programs. October 21, 2004. Belarus Democracy Act Will Help Cause of Freedom, Bush Says United States State Department. Retrieved July 9, 2008.
  22. CIA World Factbook. 2005. Belarus - Military Retrieved July 9, 2008.
  23. Embassy of the Republic of Belarus in the United States. Summary of the Report “Belarus: Poverty Assessment. Can Poverty Reduction and Access to Services Be Sustained?” Retrieved July 10, 2008.
  24. United Nations Development Program. UNDP and the Government of Belarus have launched a new joint project aimed at elaborating the national poverty reduction strategy Retrieved July 10, 2008.
  25. World Bank. Household Archives Poverty Assessment Summaries Retrieved July 10, 2008.
  26. European Union. November 2006. The EU's Relationship With Belarus - Trade Retrieved July 10, 2008.
  27. Encyclopædia Britannica Online. 2008. Belarus Retrieved July 10, 2008.

References
ISBN links support NWE through referral fees

  • Birgerson, Susanne Michele. After the breakup of a multi-ethnic empire: Russia, successor states, and Eurasian security. Westport, CT: Praeger, 2002. ISBN 0275969657
  • CIA World Factbook. Belarus June 2008.Retrieved August 26, 2019.
  • Eastern Europe, Russia and Central Asia 2003. Regional surveys of the world. London: Europa, 2002. ISBN 1857431375
  • Fedor, Helen, ed. Belarus: A Country Study. Washington: GPO for the Library of Congress, 1995. Online: Belarus Library of Congress. Retrieved August 26, 2019.
  • Jones, Michael. The New Cambridge Medieval History. Volume VI, c.1300-c.1415. Cambridge: Cambridge University Press, 2000. ISBN 0521362903
  • Lerski, Jerzy J., Piotr Wróbel, and Richard J. Kozicki. Historical Dictionary of Poland, 966-1945. Westport, CT: Greenwood Press, 1996. ISBN 0313260079
  • Nowak, Andrzej. The Russo-Polish Historical Confrontation Rice University - Sarmatian Review XVII. 1997. Retrieved August 26, 2019.
  • Robinson, Charles H. The Conversion of Europe. London: Longmans, Green. online [1] googlebooks. 1917. Retrieved August 26, 2019.
  • Scheuch, Erwin K., and David Sciulli. The annals of the International Institute of Sociology: Societies, corporations, and the nation state v. 7. Leiden: Brill, 2000. ISBN 9004116648
  • U.S. Department of State. Background Note: Belarus Retrieved August 26, 2019.
  • Zaprudnik, Jan. Belarus: at a Crossroads in History. Westview series on the post-Soviet republics. Boulder: Westview Press, 1993. ISBN 0813317940

External links

All links retrieved September 27, 2023.



Credits

New World Encyclopedia writers and editors rewrote and completed the Wikipedia article in accordance with New World Encyclopedia standards. This article abides by terms of the Creative Commons CC-by-sa 3.0 License (CC-by-sa), which may be used and disseminated with proper attribution. Credit is due under the terms of this license that can reference both the New World Encyclopedia contributors and the selfless volunteer contributors of the Wikimedia Foundation. To cite this article click here for a list of acceptable citing formats.The history of earlier contributions by wikipedians is accessible to researchers here:

The history of this article since it was imported to New World Encyclopedia:

Note: Some restrictions may apply to use of individual images which are separately licensed.