The Capital

Belarus gives Nobel laureate Bialiatski 10 years in prison

- By Yuras Karmanau

TALLINN, Estonia — A court on Friday sentenced Belarus’ top human rights advocate and one of the winners of the 2022 Nobel Peace Prize to 10 years in prison, the latest move in a yearslong crackdown on dissent that has engulfed the ex-Soviet nation since 2020.

The harsh punishment of Ales Bialiatski and three of his colleagues was delivered in response to massive protests over a 2020 election that gave authoritar­ian President Alexander Lukashenko a new term in office.

Lukashenko, a longtime ally of Russian President Vladimir Putin who backed Putin’s invasion of Ukraine, has ruled the ex-Soviet country with an iron fist since 1994. More than 35,000 people were arrested, and thousands were beaten by police amid the protests, the largest ever held in the country.

Belarus is an outlier in its support of the year-old Russian invasion, with other countries in the region not backing Moscow publicly.

Bialiatski and his colleagues at the human rights center he founded were convicted of financing actions violating public order and smuggling, the center reported Friday.

Valiantsin Stefanovic­h was given a nine-year sentence; Uladzimir Labkovicz seven years; and Dzmitry Salauyou was sentenced in absentia to eight years in prison.

During the trial, behind closed doors, the 60-yearold Bialiatski and his colleagues were held in a caged enclosure in the courtroom. They have spent a year and nine months behind bars since their arrest. In the photos from the courtroom released Friday by Belarus’ state news agency Belta, Bialiatksi,

clad in black clothes, looked wan, but calm.

All four activists have maintained their innocence, the Human Rights Center Viasna said after the verdict. Viasna is Belarusian for “spring.”

In his final address to the court, Bialiatski urged the authoritie­s to “stop the civil war in Belarus.” He said it became obvious to him from the case files that “the investigat­ors were fulfilling the task they were given: to deprive Viasna human rights advocates of freedom at any cost, destroy Viasna and stop our work.”

Exiled Belarusian opposition leader Sviatlana Tsikhanous­kaya called the verdict “appalling.”

“We must do everything to fight against this shameful injustice (and) free them,” Tsikhanous­kaya tweeted Friday.

Memorial, the prominent Russian human rights group that shared the 2022 Nobel Peace Prize with Bialiatski and the Ukrainian Center for Civil Liberties, in an online statement denounced the verdict as “an undisguise­d lawless reprisal for their human rights activities as part of a campaign of terror against civil society and the entire people of Belarus.”

Oleg Orlov, co-chair of Memorial, attempted to fly to Minsk to support Bialiatski on Friday, but was prevented from boarding the flight, with airline representa­tives telling him Belarus had barred him from entering the country.

“Crimes are better committed without witnesses,” Orlov said.

Volodymyr Yavorsky of the Center for Civil Liberties told The Associated Press that Ukrainian human rights advocates express solidarity with Bialiatski and demand his release.

“This verdict shows that the highest level of repression in Europe is in Belarus,” Yavorsky said. “Ukraine is currently resisting the very totalitari­an model that the Kremlin tries to impose on the entire former Soviet space.”

The punishment also elicited outrage in the West.

The Norwegian Helsinki Committee, a nongovernm­ental human rights organizati­on, said it was “shocked by the cynicism behind the sentences.”

Condemnati­ons of the verdict also came from the Council of Europe rights watchdog and the U.N. Human Rights spokespers­on.

Bialiatski is the fourth person in the 121-year history of the Nobel Prizes to receive the award while in prison or detention.

 ?? VITALY PIVOVARCHY­K/BELTA POOL PHOTO ?? Ales Bialiatski, head of the Belarusian Vyasna rights group, sits in a defendants’ cage during a court session Jan. 5 in Minsk, Belarus.
VITALY PIVOVARCHY­K/BELTA POOL PHOTO Ales Bialiatski, head of the Belarusian Vyasna rights group, sits in a defendants’ cage during a court session Jan. 5 in Minsk, Belarus.

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