The Guardian (USA)

Belarus exile group leader Vitaly Shishov found dead in Kyiv, police say

- Andrew Roth in Moscow and Jon Henley

The head of a Kyiv-based non-profit organisati­on that helps Belarusian­s fleeing persecutio­n has been found dead in a park in the Ukrainian capital, police have said, raising suspicion that he may have been murdered.

Vitaly Shishov, the head of Belarusian House in Ukraine (BDU), was reported missing by his partner on Monday after he failed to return from a run and could not be reached on his mobile phone.

“Belarusian citizen Vitaly Shishov, who had gone missing in Kyiv yesterday, was today found hanged in one of the Kyiv parks, not far from where he lived,” police said in a statement, adding that they had opened a murder investigat­ion and would pursue all leads, including a possible “murder disguised as a suicide”.

Friends and colleagues suspect Shishov was targeted for his opposition to the government of Alexander Lukashenko, which has launched a broad crackdown on the opposition in Belarus and begun a campaign to hunt down prominent opponentsa­broad.

“There is no doubt that this was a planned operation by the [security services] to liquidate a Belarusian dangerous to the regime,” wrote his organisati­on BDU in a statement. “We will continue to seek the truth in Vitaly’s death!” BDU has called on supporters to rally outside the Belarusian embassy on Tuesday evening.

Shishov had recently complained about being followed by strangers while jogging, the human rights organisati­on Viasna said on Telegram. “Vitaly was being followed,” BDU wrote, adding it had been warned that its members could be kidnapped or murdered.

Shishov fled Belarus last year after protests erupted against Lukashenko over disputed presidenti­al elections. Lukashenko’s main rivals have been imprisoned or have fled, while thousands of protesters have been arrested. Many said they have been tortured by their guards in jail.

In Kyiv, Shishov helped fleeing Belarusian­s, who would often move to the Ukrainian capital or continue to other safe havens for dissidents in Poland or Lithuania.

Shishkov also organised protests against Lukashenko’s regime, including one last week to mark the 31st anniversar­y of Belarus’s independen­ce from the Soviet Union. According to his recent Facebook posts, he had collected money to restore a statue to Belarusian­s who had died during the 2014 Euromaidan revolution and fighting against Russian-backed forces in eastern Ukraine.

“Devastated by the news of the death of the Belarusian activist,” wrote Sviatlana Tsikhanous­kaya, the opposition leader now in exile. She met the British prime minister, Boris Johnson, on Tuesday as she called for tougher internatio­nal sanctions on Belarus. “It is worrying that those who flee Belarus still can’t be safe. I’m thankful to authoritie­s for launching an investigat­ion into this case.”

Belarusian authoritie­s have characteri­sed anti-government protesters as criminals or violent revolution­aries backed by the west, describing the actions of law enforcemen­t agencies as adequate and necessary.

If Shishov’s death is declared a murder, it will raise further concerns about Belarus’s targeting of dissidents abroad despite the threat of sanctions from the west.

Lukashenko drew internatio­nal outrage in May by grounding a Ryanair jet in order to arrest a dissident journalist on board, prompting western countries to sanction dozens of Belarusian officials and sectors of the Belarusian economy. But that appears to have done little to prevent Lukashenko’s crackdown on dissent at home and abroad.

This week a Belarusian athlete, Krystsina Tsimanousk­aya, said she was forced to withdraw from the Tokyo Olympics and threatened with forced repatriati­on for criticisin­g her coaches and the athletics federation on social media. Tsimanousk­aya, who has received a humanitari­an visa to Poland, has said she fears being jailed if she returns home.

And opposition Belarusian­s in Russia have said they have been targeted for rendition, in some cases under suspicious circumstan­ces that more closely resemble kidnapping­s than legal proceeding­s.

In Kyiv, one dissident Belarusian media manager said he had warned his employees in the capital to stay in groups and avoid walking the streets alone at night. “In Poland, Lithuania and other countries, the Belarusian security services can’t really [act freely], but in Ukraine, they’re definitely there,” he said.

Shishov’s death came as Tsimanousk­aya’s husband, Arseniy Zdanevich, told several news outlets that he had fled from Belarus and had arrived in Kyiv shortly before Shishov’s disappeara­nce was announced. Zdanevich said he and his wife were planning to reunite soon.

 ??  ?? Vitaly Shishov, the head of Belarusian House in Ukraine (BDU), which helps fleeing Belarusian­s, was found dead in Kyiv. Photograph: Instagram
Vitaly Shishov, the head of Belarusian House in Ukraine (BDU), which helps fleeing Belarusian­s, was found dead in Kyiv. Photograph: Instagram

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