Tuesday, December 14, 2021

Belarus jails opposition leader’s husband for 18 years


Syarhei Tsikhanouski arrested in 2020 as he prepared to challenge Alexander Lukashenko

Syarhei Tsikhanouski addressing crowds of supporters in Minsk in May 2020, before his arrest. Photograph: Sergei Grits/AP

Reuters in Moscow
Tue 14 Dec 2021

Syarhei Tsikhanouski, the husband of Belarus’s opposition leader, Sviatlana Tsikhanouskaya, has been sentenced to 18 years in jail for organising mass unrest and inciting social hatred, the official Belta news agency reported.

Five supporters tried with Tsikhanouski were jailed for 14-16 years.

Tsikhanouski, a video blogger, was jailed in May 2020 as he prepared to run against the Belarus leader, Alexander Lukashenko, in that August’s presidential election. He denied the charges. His wife stood in his place in the election, which led to months of mass protests after Lukashenko claimed a landslide victory and the opposition accused him of rigging the ballot.

A few hours before the verdict was pronounced, Tsikhanouskaya called it “illegal” and something that “should not be tolerated”.

“Commenting on the so-called ‘verdict’, I will ask myself only one question: what will I do with this news? And I will continue to defend the person I love, who has become a leader for millions of Belarusians,” she said in a video message. “I will try to do something very difficult, perhaps impossible, in order to bring closer the moment when we will see him in the new Belarus.”

Sviatlana Tsikhanouskaya speaking to the European parliament in November 2021. Photograph: Reuters

After the election Tsikhanouskaya fled to neighbouring Lithuania to escape a sweeping crackdown. She has since gained prominence, meeting an array of western leaders.

Her husband’s trial was closed to the public, and lawyers were banned from disclosing details of the case.

In July, a Belarusian court jailed the former presidential contender Viktor Babariko for 14 years after convicting him of corruption, charges he denied. In September, Maria Kolesnikova, one of the leaders of last year’s mass street protests against Lukashenko, was sentenced to 11 years in prison.

The UN special rapporteur, Anaïs Marin, said more than 35,000 people had been arbitrarily detained over the past year and tens of thousands of Belarusians had fled abroad, fearing repression.

'No time to cry', Belarus opposition leader says of husband's sentence



'We don't have time to cry,' said Tikhanovskaya
 (AFP/Kenzo TRIBOUILLARD)

Kate GILLAM
Tue, December 14, 2021,

Belarus's exiled opposition leader Svetlana Tikhanovskaya on Tuesday told AFP she will not "cry" over a lengthy prison term the regime in Minsk handed to her husband Sergei Tikhanovsky.

Instead, she vowed to AFP in an interview, she will redouble her efforts to galvanise the EU to put more pressure on Belarusian leader Alexander Lukashenko in the name of democracy.

"I'm not going to, you know, to be panicked because of this because I understand that we don't have time to cry, we don't have time to think about it too much," she said.


It was Tikhanovskaya's first media reaction after a Belarus court earlier Tuesday sentenced Sergei Tikhanovsky to 18 years behind bars.

Five other co-defendants were alongside him in the closed courtroom for the verdict in their months-long trial.

State media reported that Tikhanovsky, a 43-year-old YouTube blogger, was found guilty of organising riots, inciting social hatred and other charges.

Svetlana Tikhanovskaya spoke in Brussels, where she was pressing EU officials to extend sanctions on Lukashenko ahead of an EU summit on Thursday.

The fact Tikhanovsky was given the maximum term possible, she said, proved that "my husband -- a brave, wonderful person -- became a personal enemy for Lukashenko".

The strongman, whose claim to re-election victory in polls last year triggered demonstrations brutally quashed by his security forces, fears the influence her husband had over the opposition, she said.

"In a sign that the regime is afraid of even those people... behind bars, even in jail... their process (trial) was closed. Because even the sight of those wonderful people can be an inspiration."

- 'Stay united' -

She pledged to fight even harder to stand up for democratic change in her country, and to prod the European Union into more action.

"My message to the European Union is stay united," she said.

While Tikhanovskaya explained that she understood that EU member states' interests might diverge on Belarus, she urged them to "be more decisive and principled".

"Think about values," she said, "because I'm sure democratic countries can't allow one dictator to, you know, influence the minds of leaders or democratic countries, it's unacceptable.

"One dictator can blackmail... the whole of Europe."

Tikhanovskaya told AFP that she had no way of communicating with her husband besides short messages transmitted through his lawyer.

She said she was certain her husband would not serve the full 18-year sentence given to him -- which she described as "just numbers on the paper" -- and that "millions of letters" would be written to protest his incarceration.

"I know how it's difficult to be behind the bars and lose years of freedom," she said.

"People behind the bars believed in us and we again, we can't betray them. We have to work, work harder, work tougher, you know, to release our beloveds."

kg-rmb/dc/tgb

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