Most sources are not ideal at all but these two should give you some idea of what's going on.
For some context, the current president and announced winner, Lukashenko, has been president since 1994, basically being the only president of Belarus since the fall of the Soviet Union. He's very buddy-buddy with Russia. Not an amicable relationship like Trump and Putin might have, but one of making very controversial statements and decisions that seem to undermine Belarus' independence and aim to integrate it closer into Russia. One of the first things he did was run controversial referendums, one of which was to make Russian an official language of Belarus alongside Belarussian, another referendum being an expansion of his own powers. I won't claim to be an expert on that but that's how a lot of people see the situation.
Exit polls showed that Lukashenko's opponent should have earned around 60% of the vote and the president should have gotten around 15%, but official results state that Lukashenko got nearly 80%. People suspect something shady and are protesting (and rioting in some cases as the accounts show). You'll see the media blame Russia for this soon.
Is anything at all being posted in English? Could you post some of what you find here?
https://archive.is/f8eZV
https://archive.is/UPqCo
Most sources are not ideal at all but these two should give you some idea of what's going on.
For some context, the current president and announced winner, Lukashenko, has been president since 1994, basically being the only president of Belarus since the fall of the Soviet Union. He's very buddy-buddy with Russia. Not an amicable relationship like Trump and Putin might have, but one of making very controversial statements and decisions that seem to undermine Belarus' independence and aim to integrate it closer into Russia. One of the first things he did was run controversial referendums, one of which was to make Russian an official language of Belarus alongside Belarussian, another referendum being an expansion of his own powers. I won't claim to be an expert on that but that's how a lot of people see the situation.
Exit polls showed that Lukashenko's opponent should have earned around 60% of the vote and the president should have gotten around 15%, but official results state that Lukashenko got nearly 80%. People suspect something shady and are protesting (and rioting in some cases as the accounts show). You'll see the media blame Russia for this soon.