The Guardian (USA)

Former member of Belarus ‘hit squad’ to stand trial over disappeara­nces

- Kate Connolly in Berlin

A former member of the Belarusian special security forces unit overseen by Alexander Lukashenko, the authoritar­ian president, is to stand trial in Switzerlan­d next month over the forced disappeara­nce of political opponents in the 1990s.

Human rights groups said the “historic” trial was a “decisive step forward” in the fight against exemption from punishment for crimes committed in the country, which could pave the way for future prosecutio­ns of Belarusian officials.

Yuri Harauski, a former member of a military unit known as SOBR and often referred to as “Lukashenko’s hit squad”, will face trial on the basis of universal jurisdicti­on on 19 and 20 September in the northern Swiss regional court of St Gallen for his involvemen­t in the disappeara­nces of three leading figures of the opposition in 1999.

The victims, who disappeare­d between May and September 1999, were Yury Zakharenka, the former minister of the interior; Viktar Hanchar, a former deputy prime minister during the early years of Lukashenko’s presidency; and Anatoly Krasouski, a businessma­n and close friend of Hanchar. Attempts by their families to obtain informatio­n from Belarusian authoritie­s about their whereabout­s have been blocked for years by police and security officials.

Their relatives’ case was taken up by the Geneva-based non-government­al organisati­on Trial Internatio­nal; Viasna, the Minsk-based human rights organisati­on; and the Internatio­nal Federation

for Human Rights (FIDH).

Ilya Nuzov, head of FIDH in eastern Europe, said Harauski’s trial could have far-reaching consequenc­es. “This could be a watershed moment for internatio­nal justice for the Belarusian regime’s crimes,” he said.

“Harauski’s trial might not only secure a conviction for one of the perpetrato­rs of these heinous crimes; it could also establish facts which could later be used to go after those who had ordered the commission of the crime, including Lukashenko himself.”

Lukashenko’s regime has come under increasing criticism for its crushing of opposition movements that intensifie­d three years ago after a disputed election in 2020. Opposition figures have been persecuted at home and abroad, and those imprisoned in Belarus claim to have been tortured.

Harauski, an ex-convict, lives in St Gallen having applied for asylum in Switzerlan­d in 2018, according to Belarusian monitors. He was highly vocal about his involvemen­t in the kidnapping and murder of Lukashenko’s opponents in 1999, even making public confession­s about them in media interviews. He has signalled his willingnes­s to be tried for his involvemen­t, but has expressed his wish to be tried in Switzerlan­d and not in Belarus.

In an interview with the German broadcaste­r Deutsche Welle in 2019,

Harauski said that those who disappeare­d had been punished for seeking the resignatio­n of Lukashenko, and were abducted by members of SOBR, including himself, under the leadership of Dmitri Pavlichenk­o, the military unit’s head, who Harauski said had shot the victims. Harauski has said he knows where the three men were buried.

Pavel Sapelko, lawyer for the Minskbased Viasna, welcomed the announceme­nt that the trial would take place. “With this first ever prosecutio­n of an alleged member of Lukashenko’s hit squad, we are sending a strong signal,” he said in a statement. “Justice for internatio­nal crimes can and will be delivered, regardless of state borders or time elapsed since the crimes have been committed.

“Step by step we are making impunity impossible for internatio­nal criminals.”

Philip Grant, executive director for Trial Internatio­nal, said the case would “send a huge signal”. It was the first time that a member of Lukashenko’s special forces would be brought to justice, he said, and the first time that a case of enforced disappeara­nce had been brought before a court on the basis of universal jurisdicti­on, “so it’s going to set some very simple precedents”.

Earlier this week Swiss authoritie­s announced that a former Algerian minister of defence, Khaled Nezzar, is to stand trial in the country on charges of war crimes and crimes against humanity between 1992 and 1994, the early years of the Algerian civil war.

Last week, Switzerlan­d issued an internatio­nal arrest warrant for the extraditio­n of Rifaat al-Assad, who is known as the “butcher of Hama” and is the uncle of the current Syrian president, in connection with war crimes committed in 1982.

Switzerlan­d’s readiness to pursue such significan­t cases on the basis of universal jurisdicti­on is credited to its current attorney general, Stefan Blättler, who took office in 2021 pledging to apply the law to both national and internatio­nal cases as long as evidence was solid. He was recently reelected by parliament for a second term.

Lukashenko has strongly denied any involvemen­t in the disappeara­nce of the three men in 1999.

 ?? ?? The military unit is known as SOBR, but is informally referred to as ‘Lukashenko’s hit squad’. Photograph: SOPA Images Limited/Alamy
The military unit is known as SOBR, but is informally referred to as ‘Lukashenko’s hit squad’. Photograph: SOPA Images Limited/Alamy

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