According to him, what is happening in Belarus is not something unexpected or new.

“Older people remember something different in Belarus, when thousands and thousands of people took to the streets in the 90s, overturned cars, burned them, threw Molotov cocktails on the first floors of the then not current boutiques and shops, but into the windows to the usual people, "BelTA quotes Lukashenko.

As the president emphasized, "the spontaneous self-organization of society, the ripening of the so-called revolutionary situation," illegitimacy of elections "and the like are all myths."

“They are completely crushed by an in-depth analysis of the events that took place long before the electoral campaign of the current year,” Lukashenka added.

Earlier, the former presidential candidate of Belarus Svetlana Tikhanovskaya said that Lukashenka would be provided with "security guarantees" if he "peacefully leaves." 

As noted by Lukashenko, he is not going to “give up power” because he does not want Belarus to return to the state of the “mid-1990s”.