Eurovision organisers reject Belarusian entry after opposition backlash

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Eurovision Organisers Reject Belarusian Entry After Opposition Backlash
The entry, by Galasy ZMesta, had received 5,800 likes and more than 40,000 dislikes on the competition's official YouTube page since Tuesday, with more than half a million views. Photo: Getty Images
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By Maria Vasilyeva and Matthias Williams

A rumbling political crisis in Belarus spilled over into the Eurovision Song Contest on Thursday, after the event's organisers rejected the country's entry by a band which has mocked protests against President Alexander Lukashenko.

Featuring lyrics such as "I will teach you to toe the line", the entry had sparked a backlash from opposition figures and fuelled calls by a European Parliament lawmaker for Belarus to be suspended from the popular competition.

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The entry, by Galasy ZMesta, had received 5,800 likes and more than 40,000 dislikes on the competition's official YouTube page since Tuesday, with more than half a million views. It has now been taken down from the site.

The European Broadcasting Union rejected the song and threatened Belarus with disqualification if it did not submit a modified version of the entry or submit a new song.

"It was concluded that the song puts the non-political nature of the Contest in question," the EBU said in a statement. "In addition, recent reactions to the proposed entry risk bringing the reputation of the ESC into disrepute."

The band's frontman Dmitry Butakov denied the song breached the competition's rules.

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Violent crackdown

“It is not news for me at all. It was expected, understandable," Butakov told Reuters.

“They took the hockey world cup from us, and Eurovision is peanuts compared to that,” he added, referring to Belarus earlier being stripped of its right to host this year's world ice hockey championships.

“I think our song is compliant. It's them who think it is not."

Belarus' state broadcaster did not respond to requests for comment on the song or on opposition calls for its exclusion from Eurovision.

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To critics, allowing the entry to be performed would have added legitimacy to a violent crackdown launched by Lukashenko against mass unrest that swept the country following an August election which demonstrators say was rigged to extend his 27-year rule.

The president denies electoral fraud and has accused the West of sponsoring the protests.

Right groups say more than 33,000 people have been detained in the crackdown, prompting the United Nations human rights chief to warn of a "human rights crisis" last month. The government says it is being unfairly maligned.

"This is a mockery of the people of Belarus, of everything that is happening in the country," said singer Angelica Agurbash, who represented Belarus at Eurovision in 2005, before the EBU's announcement.

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