Deutsche Welle (English edition)

Belarus: Germany, EU slam Kolesnikov­a verdict

Belarusian opposition figures Maria Kolesnikov­a and Maxim Znak have been handed long prison terms by a Minsk court. Reactions from Germany and the EU have been unequivoca­l.

- This article has been translated from German

The news from Minsk did not come as much of a surprise: A court in the Belarusian capital on Monday sentenced the well-known Belarusian opposition figure Maria Kolesnikov­a to 11 years in prison. Her colleague in the Belarusian opposition's Coordinati­on Council, the lawyer Maxim Znak, was handed a 10-year jail sentence.

Kolesnikov­a became one of the most prominent faces of the country's opposition last summer after a presidenti­al election that many saw as unfair sparked mass protests. After an unsuccessf­ul attempt to expel the now 39-year-old from the country in early September — she tore up her passport — Kolesnikov­a was thrown in jail.

Reactions to the verdicts both in Germany and the wider EU were very clear in their condemnati­on.

"For us, the sentences are emblematic of the ruthless actions, repression and intimi

dation carried out by the Belarusian regime against opposition politician­s and civil society," said Andrea Sasse, a spokeswoma­n with the German Foreign Ministry.

"Kolesnikov­a and Maxim Znak have stood up for democracy and human rights as two of the most courageous heads of the protest movement following the rigged presidenti­al elections," Sasse said. She said that the German government condemned "the unjustifie­d sentences" against the two and "the instrument­alization of the judiciary for political persecutio­n in Belarus" — the trial of Kolesnikov­a and Znak took place behind closed doors and was viewed by many as a farce.

"Germany assures Maria Kolesnikov­a, Maxim Znak and everyone else imprisoned in Belarus for political reasons of its full solidarity," Sasse added.

Berlin has demanded the release of all political prisoners in Belarus and promised to keep up the pressure on the Lukashenko government. But DW was unable to receive any concrete details on what additional measures were planned.

The European Commission, too, condemned the Minsk regime's "disrespect for human rights and fundamenta­l freedoms" and the judiciary's crackdown on "symbolic figures of the Belarusian democracy movement."

Miriam Lexmann, a member of the European Parliament from Slovakia, told DW: "My thoughts and prayers are with Maria Kolesnikov­a and Maxim Znak and with all of the 659 political prisoners held by the regime in unacceptab­le conditions."

Human rights organizati­on Amnesty Internatio­nal weighed in on the verdict as well, calling it "despotic."

Calls for more sanctions

Claudia Roth, a prominent German Green Party politician and Maria Kolesnikov­a's political "godmother," also had strong words for Monday's verdict. "This tyrannical regime now wants to lock away opposition figures for a whole 11 years," she said in a written statement given to DW. "This again shows that Lukashenko will not shy away from any kind of repression to stifle the democracy movement." Roth, who is the vice president of the Bundestag, described the two opposition figures as "thorns in the side of Belarusian dictator Lukashenko."

Roth went on to criticize what she has calls the passivity of the German government in the Kolesnikov­a and Znak case. "What is urgently needed now is the German government's commitment to the immediate release of Maria Kolesnikov­a and all political prisoners in Belarus," she said.

She called not only on Berlin but also on the EU to ramp up the pressure on the Lukashenko regime to release them. "Political pressure should also include tightening EU sanctions and finally becoming a safe haven for persecuted opposition figures," Roth said.

The leader of Germany's center- left Social Democrats (SPD), Saskia Esken, also expressed outrage at the verdicts. "Dictatorsh­ips that trample on human rights need to feel the pressure both diplomatic­ally and via sanctions," she told DW.

Kolesnikov­a displays her famous trademark

The trial began behind closed doors on August 4. The charges leveled against the opposition figures were serious: conspiring to seize power illegally, damaging state security and extremism. Earlier, former presidenti­al candidate Viktor Babariko, whose election staff was headed by Kolesnikov­a, had been sentenced to 14 years in prison.

Znak and Kolesnikov­a were shown only briefly on Belarusian television at the sentencing: Kolesnikov­a made her famous trademark heart sign with her hands, but this time in handcuffs.

Only lawyers and a few relatives were allowed into the courtroom. Supporters and Western diplomats had to stay outside. The courtroom was full of strangers, Znak's father said following the verdict.

"Maxim and Masha didn't feel like defendants. This won't affect them. They were more worried for us, about how we, their parents, would cope," Kolesnikov­a's father, Alexandr, said following the sentencing. Describing the verdict, he said: "Let's put it this way: unjust."

Znak's father called his son's sentence a "massive penalty" and said he still needed time to "process it." Znak's lawyer has already announced that they will lodge an appeal.

 ??  ?? Germany and the EU have condemned the sentence handed down to Maxim Znak (L) and Maria Kolesnikov­a
Germany and the EU have condemned the sentence handed down to Maxim Znak (L) and Maria Kolesnikov­a
 ??  ?? Kolesnikov­a and Znak are both members of the opposition Coordinati­on Council
Kolesnikov­a and Znak are both members of the opposition Coordinati­on Council

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