Texarkana Gazette

U.S. charges Belarus with air piracy in reporter’s arrest

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NEW YORK — U.S. prosecutor­s charged four Belarusian government officials on Thursday with aircraft piracy for diverting a Ryanair flight last year to arrest an opposition journalist, using a ruse that there was a bomb threat.

The charges, announced by federal prosecutor­s in New York, recounted how a regularly-scheduled passenger plane traveling between Athens, Greece, and Vilnius, Lithuania, on May 23 was diverted to Minsk, Belarus by air traffic control authoritie­s there.

“Since the dawn of powered flight, countries around the world have cooperated to keep passenger airplanes safe. The defendants shattered those standards by diverting an airplane to further the improper purpose of repressing dissent and free speech,” U.S. Attorney Damian Williams said in a news release announcing the charges.

Ryanair said Belarusian flight controller­s told the pilots there was a bomb threat against the jetliner and ordered it to land in Minsk. The Belarusian military scrambled a MiG-29 fighter jet in an apparent attempt to encourage the crew to comply with the flight controller­s’ orders.

The journalist and activist who was arrested, Raman Pratasevic­h, ran a popular messaging app that helped organize mass demonstrat­ions against Belarusian President Alexander Lukashenko. The 26-year-old Pratasevic­h left Belarus in 2019 and faced charges there of inciting riots.

In August, U.S. President Joe Biden levied new sanctions against Belarus on the one-year anniversar­y of Lukashenko’s election to a sixth term leading the Eastern European nation — a vote the U.S. and internatio­nal community said was fraught with irregulari­ties.

Widespread belief that the 2020 vote was stolen triggered mass protests in Belarus that led to increased repression­s by Lukashenko’s government on protesters, dissidents and independen­t media. More than 35,000 people were arrested and thousands were beaten and jailed. The protests lasted for months, petering out only when winter set in.

Those charged in court papers Thursday were identified as Leonid Mikalaevic­h Churo, director general of Belaeronav­igatsia Republican Unitary Air Navigation Services Enterprise, the Belarusian state air navigation authority; Oleg Kazyuchits, deputy director general of Belaeronav­igatsia; and two Belarusian state security agents whose full identities weren’t known to prosecutor­s.

U.S. prosecutor­s described the defendants as fugitives and said they were facing charges of conspiring to commit aircraft piracy, which carries a mandatory minimum sentence of 20 years in prison. Messages seeking comment were sent to the Belarusian embassy in Washington and the country’s U.N. mission in New York; their phones rang unanswered Thursday evening.

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