Around 100 Belarusians protested in downtown Minsk Sunday against the prospect of deeper relations with Russia, the fifth such demonstration in the past month.
The protesters held a noontime march from October Square to Independence Square and formed a human chain near the main post office.
Uniformed police were deployed but did not intervene against the demonstrators.
A previous demonstration in December saw multiple arrests.
The gathering, in subfreezing temperatures, appeared to attract slightly fewer participants than the previous demonstrations, one of which attracted upward of 1,000 people.
The unsanctioned rallies were prompted by a fresh round of talks early this month between Russian President Vladimir Putin and Belarusian President Alexander Lukashenko that coincided with the 20th anniversary of a 1999 union treaty that was supposed to create a unified state.
The talks hit a snag that Lukashenko explained by saying he was merely seeking “equal terms” in mutual relations.
Minsk is heavily reliant on Moscow for cheap oil and billions in annual subsidies to prop up its Soviet-era economy.
Moscow has pressured Minsk to accelerate military and economic integration.
There have been signs that Russia’s annexation of Ukraine’s Crimean Peninsula in 2014 and its subsequent backing of armed separatists in eastern Ukraine spooked Lukashenko and spurred his government to scale back its dependence on Russia.
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