Up-close look at opposition leader Maria Kolesnikova hours before alleged kidnapping in Minsk
"Peaceful actions all across Belarus since Aug. 9 and representing the view of the majority of people are so massive that authorities have begun actively to use methods of terror in order to suppress them," the united opposition's coordinating council said on its website Monday.
Maria Kolesnikova, one of the few leading opposition figures still in Belarus, the council's spokesman Anton Radniankou and its executive secretary Ivan Krautsou have been "kidnapped" by unknown people, according to the statement. Amid a renewed police crackdown on protesters, detentions and the forced expulsion from Belarus of another council member, Volha Kavalkova, the disappearances may deepen the crisis in the country, the council warned.