U.S.-Belarus Relations
Unprecedented Violation of Vienna Convention
Located on the north-west outskirts of Belarus's capital city Minsk,
Drozdy is a residential compound where some senior Belarusian
government and Communist Party officials lived before the breakup of
the Soviet Union. After Belarus declared its independence in 1991 and
its recognition by the international community resulted in the
establishment of diplomatic relations, the government of Belarus
offered arriving foreign ambassadors to come reside in Drozdy, a leafy
, quiet and guarded neighborhood. First diplomatic tenants appeared in
Drozdy as early as in 1992, a long time before the very institution of
the presidency in Belarus and Belarus's first presidential election.
In
April 1998 the Belarusian authorities informed those chiefs of mission
who lived in Drozdy that they would have to vacate their residences due
to the alleged need of utility repairs. The diplomatic dialogue that
ensued to persuade the Belarusian authorities to reverse their
decision, clearly in violation of the Vienna Convention on Diplomatic
Relations and the valid leases signed by respective foreign missions
and the government of Belarus, was followed by a string of deadlines
set by the Belarusian government, unacceptable for their categorical
form. Other deplorable events, like an attempt to weld shut a gate to
the U.S. ambassador's residence, blocking off vehicular access to the
compound, intrusions of the territories of the residences, led to the
departure of the EU and U.S. ambassadors from Belarus on June 22, 1998
and such subsequent retaliatory measure as travel restrictions by the
EU on a range of senior Belarusian officials. The U.S. joined the move
on July 14, 1998, also suspending some military exchange programs
involving GoB officials.
This
international reaction was due to the unprecedented violation of the
recognized standards of treatment of foreign diplomats. The centuries
old tradition codified in the Vienna Convention is that diplomats need
to be able to live and work free from intimidation. If they don't feel
secure in their homes and chanceries, they cannot perform their
diplomatic duties.
For
months since June 1998 the U.S. Government has made clear to the
Belarusian Government that any satisfactory resolution to the Drozdy
issue that would send U.S. Ambassador back required recreating a secure
legal basis for any future U.S. residence in Minsk. Belarus violated
the Vienna Convention on Diplomatic Relations and unilaterally
abrogated the government-to-government agreement by which we had
acquired our residence at Drozdy.
U.S.
Ambassador Daniel Speckhard returned to Belarus in September 1999 after
the resolution of the compensation issue and additional assurances by
the Belarusian government that it would strictly abide by the Vienna
Convention on Diplomatic Relations in the future.