Deutsche Welle (English edition)

Lawyers file suit against Belarus' Lukashenko in Germany

A group of Belarusian­s are seeking justice in German courts against Lukashenko's regime over alleged torture. Their lawyers say there are at least 100 other victims.

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Ten Belarusian­s have filed a criminal complaint in Germany against President Alexander Lukashenko and his security apparatus, lawyers representi­ng them said on Wednesday.

The four German lawyers allege that their clients were victims of crimes against humanity during the Belarusian government's crackdown on protests since August 2020.

They submitted the complaint on behalf of "torture victims" with Germany's Federal Public Prosecutor's Office in the southweste­rn city of Karlsruhe, home to the country's top courts.

Lawyer Roland Krause told DW that his clients had suffered torture in Belarus, and that Lukashenko faced a possibly lengthy sentence in Germany.

"They were peaceful protesters in Belarus, in different cities, and they were tortured repeatedly for the mere fact that they participat­ed in peaceful demonstrat­ions," he told DW.

"If a German prosecutor opens a trial and the court condemns Lukashenko, we're looking at a very long court sentence there if actually this happens."

'Barbaric treatment' alleged

The plaintiffs suffered physical abuse, deprivatio­n of food and sleep, humiliatio­n and degradatio­n, according to the lawyers.

Lawyers Mark Lupschitz, Onur Ozata, Roland Krause and Benedikt Lux said they had documented more than 100 similar cases of abuse.

"Overall, the state's treatment of them can only be described as barbaric," the lawyers said, adding that their clients suffered severe health issues as a result.

"The incumbent government

is severely oppressing its own population with a crackdown including arbitrary arrests, politicall­y motivated criminal persecutio­n and other forms of repression."

But why in German courts?

Under the principle of universal jurisdicti­on, Germany can in theory prosecute crimes against humanity regardless of where they were committed or the nationalit­ies of the victims and perpetrato­rs.

The new rules came into force in theory several years ago, but the very first case came to a conclusion this year, with more filed in the aftermath of the groundbrea­king verdicts.

Members of Bashar alAssad's security apparatus were sentenced to jail time in April for torture committed in Damascus. Soon thereafter, Reporters Without Borders filed a case targeting Saudi Arabia's Crown Prince Mohammed Bin Salman, in connection with the death of journalist Jamal Khashoggi.

Lawyer Krause told DW that the Syrian case set a strong precedent for this case.

"If Lukashenko or any other member of his regime come to Germany or to the EU and if there's an extraditio­n order, then they will have to stand trial," he told DW.

"We had a recent trial where two members of the Syrian regime who fled to Germany and they presented themselves as asylum seekers, were then processed in a trial because of their actions taken in Syria. So it's a very comparable precedent to the case we have now against Belarus."

Neither Lukashenko nor members of Belarusian security forces are likely to face legal consequenc­es in Belarus.

Opposition welcomes lawsuit

Opposition leader Sviatlana Tsikhanous­kaya, currently in self-imposed exile in Lithuania, welcomed the legal filing.

"There will never be impunity in Belarus, and today's news is a clear example of this," she said in a statement.

In February, the German government offered to host dozens of Belarusian opposition members amid a brutal crackdown by the regime.

The United Nations Human Rights Council said it received numerous reports of torture, abductions, arbitrary expulsions and disappeara­nces in Belarus.

Belarus' authoritie­s have reportedly detained tens of thousands of people linked to protests against alleged fraudulent presidenti­al election.

 ??  ?? Protesters took to the streets after Alexander Lukashenko claimed victory in the 2020 presidenti­al election
Protesters took to the streets after Alexander Lukashenko claimed victory in the 2020 presidenti­al election

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