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INTERNATIONAL
LEAGUE FOR HUMAN RIGHTS
BELARUS
UPDATE
Edited
by Victor Cole
Vol.
5, No. 36
September
2002
IN
THIS ISSUE:
-
Belarus Not Invited To Commemorative Session In New
York.
-
Belarus Seat At OSCE PA Will Remain Vacant
-
PACE Sets Up Committee To Investigate Disappearances
- Missing Politician's Wife Wants Him Declared Dead
-
Activist Jailed For Commemorating Journalist's Disappearance
-
Convicted Journalists Leave Hometown To Serve Their
Terms
-
Four Krishna Followers Jailed For Requesting Registration
-
Regime Backs Iraqi Resistance Against U.S. War Threats
-
Putin Urges Action On Russia-Belarus Union Plan
-
Pro-Lukashenko Youth, Unite!
-
Market Vendors Protest Tax Rises, Insurance Fees
-
IKEA Backs Off Plans To Invest In Belarus
- HUMAN RIGHTS AND OPPOSITION NEWS-
BELARUS
NOT INVITED TO COMMEMORATIVE SESSION IN NEW YORK.
President
Bush visited New York City on September 11 to pay a
tribute to those whose lives were lost one year ago
at the World Trade Center in the terrorist attacks against
the U.S. The U.S. President will lay wreaths at the
World Trade Center, Pentagon and Shanksville, Pa., crash
sites, and will host a reception for heads of the international
delegations. Among those not invited to the Winter Garden
event are representatives of Cuba, Iran, Iraq, and Libya,
all nations on the U.S. list of state sponsors of terrorism,
as well as leaders from Burma and Belarus, whose human-rights
records raise concerns. (The New York Times, September
8)
BELARUS SEAT AT OSCE PA WILL REMAIN VACANT
Bruce
George, chair of the British House of Commons Defense
Committee and the OSCE PA's newly elected President,
informed the OSCE Permanent Council on September 5 that
members of the OSCE PA's Standing Committee decided
that Belarus's seat at the OSCE PA will remain vacant.
The issue will be considered again during the next session,
which is to be held in February 2003. (OSCE, September
5)
COMMITTEE
SET UP TO INVESTIGATE DISAPPEARANCES IN BELARUS
The
Parliamentary Assembly's Committee on Legal Affairs
and Human Rights discussed the human rights situation
in Belarus during a meeting on September 2 in Paris
and decided to set up an ad hoc sub-committee to clarify
the circumstances of political disappearances in Belarus.
At a PACE session scheduled for September 23-27, 2002,
the sub-committee will elect its chair. One of the most
likely candidates is Sergei Kovalev, a prominent human
rights defender, former political prisoner of the Soviet
era, and a deputy of the Russian State Duma.
In
May 2002, the wives and mothers of several prominent
victims of the Lukashenko regime and leaders of the
Belarusian democratic opposition urged the Committee
to establish an independent international commission
to investigate the circumstances surrounding the disappearance
and probable deaths of Victor Gonchar, a 13th Supreme
Soviet deputy chair and a high profile antigovernment
politician, who disappeared on September 16, 1999; businessman
Anatoly Krasovsky, who disappeared along with Gonchar;
Yuri Zakharenko, the former Minister of Internal Affairs,
founder of an independent officers' organization critical
of the Lukashenko government, who disappeared on May
7, 1999; and Dmitry Zavadsky, a Belarusian cameraman
for the Russian public television station ORT, who disappeared
on July 7, 2000. "We have exhausted the possibilities
to learn the truth about the fate of our husbands,"
they wrote. (PACE, September 2)
MISSING
POLITICIAN'S WIFE WANTS HIM DECLARED DEAD
On
September 2, a Minsk court began hearing a lawsuit filed
by Olga Zakharenko, the wife of Yuri Zakharenko, the
former Minister of Internal Affairs. Olga Zakharenko,
who had received political asylum in Germany, said that
she believes that Belarusian secret agents and Lukashenko
were behind her husband's disappearance and wants the
court to declare him dead. Vladimir Borodach, a member
of an independent committee established by the democratic
opposition to investigate Zakharenko's disappearance,
said the commission believes the general is dead and
that his death was a result of his opposition to Lukashenko.
Official investigations have so far failed to find those
missing, but several Belarusian police and security
officials have defected recently and said that the disappeared
people had likely been murdered on orders from the high-ranking
Lukashenko officials. (Charter 97, September 2)
ACTIVIST
JAILED FOR COMMEMORATING JOURNALIST'S DISAPPEARANCE
Dmitry
Ivanovsky, deputy chair of the Grodno branch of the
BPF Adradzhenne, was charged with violation of Art.
167, par. 1 ("participation in mass actions violating
public order") of the Belarusian Administrative
Offences Code and sentenced to ten days' imprisonment
for taking part in a July 8 picket, the latest unauthorized
protest in a series of actions staged by a network of
activists called "Chain of People Who Care,"
Viasna Human Rights Center reported. That day, local
activists commemorated another year since the disappearance
of journalist Dmitry Zavadsky in 2000 and demanded an
impartial investigation into his disappearance. Yuri
Istomin, chair of the Grodno branch of the United Civic
Party, was fined 200,000 BYR (about $110) for the same
offence. (Viasna Human Rights Center, September 2 )
CONVICTED
JOURNALISTS LEAVE HOMETOWN TO SERVE THEIR TERMS
Mikola
Markevich, editor-in-chief of Pahonya, a Grodno-based
independent weekly newspaper, and Pavel Mazheiko, a
journalist for the same newspaper, left Grodno on August
31 to serve their terms after being convicted in June
2002 of libeling Alexander Lukashenko under Art. 367
(2) of the Belarusian Criminal Code. The journalists
were convicted in connection with an article in Pahonia
printed in the run-up to September presidential elections,
calling on voters not to support Lukashenko. The 11,000
issues were confiscated in the printing house before
they could be distributed. Markevich and Mazheiko were
sentenced to 2.5 years and two years of "restricted
freedom" respectively. The sentences were later
cut on appeal to one year for each journalist.
Markevich
is to spend his year and a half in the town of Osipovichy,
the Mogilev Region, while Mazheiko will serve his term
in Zhlobin, the Gomel Region. Both are small, economically
depressed towns located in the country's east, in areas
badly affected by the fallout from the 1986 Chernobyl
nuclear disaster in nearby Ukraine. Dozens of friends
and colleagues came to see them off.
The
journalists compared their treatment to that of political
prisoners during the reign of Soviet dictator Josef
Stalin. Internal exile was one way Soviet authorities
dealt with intellectuals who criticized the regime.
"The parallels with the Stalin era are obvious,"
Markevich said. "My grandfather was repressed,
and now the Belarusian authorities are using the same
methods." Mazheiko said that after he exhausts
his appeals in the Belarusian court system, he will
appeal to the United Nations Human Rights Committee.
Both journalists are required to start working within
two weeks. Supposedly, they are free to choose any job
they manage to find. However, when Mazheiko was offered
a position with a local newspaper, Yury Kuzmich, chief
of the Zhlobin Correctional Institution #1, where the
journalist serves his term, prohibited him from accepting
it. All efforts to find a teaching position and get
hired by a local state-run construction company also
failed, Mazheiko said.
Markevich
also is still looking for a job. He was refused a position
with a local school district and hopes to be employed
by the local saw-mill. "You only stand a chance
to land a job if you are a skilled technician,"
he wrote to his colleagues. "Being a political
prisoner only aggravates the situation." (Belapan,
Viasna Human Rights Center, August 31-September 5)
-RELIGIOUS
FREEDOM IN BELARUS-
KRISHNA
FOLLOWERS JAILED FOR REQUESTING REGISTRATION
Tatiana
and Sergei Akadanovs, Dmitry Alisevich, and Aleksey
Romanchuk, all members of the unregistered Hindu Shiva-Sakti
community, the Light of Kailash, were sentenced to ten
days' imprisonment each for holding unauthorized demonstration,
Belapan reported on September 3. Akadanovs and Alisevich
were among twelve other believers who were arrested
by the police for holding two unauthorized pickets on
August 17 at the intersection of Frantsysk Skaryna Avenue
and Lenin Street and on Oktyabrskaya Square in Minsk.
Holding placards that read: "No to State Orthodox
Terror," "Freedom for Religious Minorities,"
and "Hands off Religious Minorities," the
protesters demanded to stop harassment of religious
minorities and to register their community. Protesting
the court's decisions, the detainees went on a hunger
strike. (Belapan, September 3)
-
INTERNATIONAL NEWS-
REGIME
BACKS IRAQI RESISTANCE AGAINST U.S. WAR THREATS
Leonid
Kozik, the new chair of the Federation of Trade Unions
of Belarus, and head of the Joint Iraqi-Belarusian Committee,
voiced the Lukashenko government's support for Iraq's
resistance against U.S. threats to launch military actions
on Iraq, the official Iraqi News Agency (INA) reported.
During a meeting with Iraqi President Saddam Hussein
on September 2, Kozik conveyed a message from Lukashenko
to Hussein "concerning bilateral relations and
the prospects of enhancing the economic cooperation
between the two countries."
During
the meeting, Saddam Hussein gave his own explanation
of why the U.S. was insisting on removing him from power
- because Iraq was preventing it from controlling Middle
East oil. "America thinks it must control the world,"
Saddam said to Kozik. "America thinks if it controls
the oil of the Middle East then it will control the
world," the Iraqi leader added.
Saddam
Hussein accused the United States of deliberately blocking
the economic ties between Iraq and Belarus by supporting
the embargo on Iraq. "One of the most important
reasons for imposing an embargo on Iraq is to deprive
the Commonwealth of Independent States of any economic
dealing with Iraq, because the United States knows the
background of our relations," Kozik was told. (INA,
September 3)
-BROTHER
SLAVS-
PUTIN
URGES ACTION ON RUSSIA-BELARUS UNION PLAN
Russian
President Putin told his Belarusian counterpart on September
4 that integration between the two countries should
remain a priority, the Moscow News reported. In a letter
to Alexander Lukashenko, Putin said he is awaiting an
answer to his proposals made at an August 14 meeting
in Moscow on speeding up introduction of a single currency
for Russia and Belarus. In the letter, Putin again reiterated
the options for possible integration and proposed setting
up a group with members of both countries to study the
plans. Greater integration between Russia and Belarus
has been and remains a priority task of Russian politics,
Putin wrote in the letter.
On
August 14, Putin backtracked on his previous skepticism
to a merger with Belarus and put forward two plans -
one that would lead to unification in two years if approved
in a referendum. Another plan would be closer cooperation
similar to the European Union, with a common currency
introduced in 2004, two years earlier than previously
planned. Lukashenko, previously the main supporter of
the union, responded that Putin's proposals are unacceptable.
Meanwhile,
the Belarusian leader accepted the diplomatic credentials
of Alexander Blokhin, the newly appointed Russian ambassador
to Belarus, Belapan reported on September 5. Lukashenko
assured the Russian envoy that his country would never
deviate from the 1999 Treaty on the Creation of the
Union State of Russia and Belarus. Blokhin affirmed
the Belarusian leader that President Putin's intentions
are "to make every effort needed to promote closer
ties between the two countries." (The Moscow News,
Belapan, September 4-5)
-AT HOME IN BELARUS-
PRO-LUKASHENKO
YOUTH, UNITE!
The
Belarusian Patriotic Youth Union, popularly referred
to as Lukamol, a government-subsidized pro-Lukashenko
youth organization, and the Belarusian Youth League,
held a joint congress on September 6 in Minsk to publicly
expressed their support to the Belarusian authoritarian
ruler. The two organizations announced their decision
to merge to "promote patriotism and loyal citizenry"
among the Belarusian youth. Addressing the delegates,
Alexander Lukashenko said that the unification of youth
organizations is "one of the most important steps
taken to consolidate the Belarusian society." "It
is conceptually important for me to see the Belarusian
society united. The three pillars of the unification
are the local councils, the organized youth movement,
and the revived trade unions," Lukashenko said.(BBC,
September 6)
MARKET VENDORS PROTEST TAX RISES, INSURANCE FEES
More
than 60 percent of the country's 180,000 registered
market vendors in more than 20 cities across Belarus
staged a strike on September 1, refusing to sell goods
on one of the busiest shopping days of the week, reported
Interfax. About 1,000 vendors gathered in the central
market in Minsk, and banging spoons on plates demanded,
"Give us work" and "No to Government
Extortion." The strikers said they were protesting
an increase in taxes and insurance fees. "Authorities
have declared war on us," said in a statement the
United Council of Belarusian Entrepreneurs, which organized
the protest.
The
September 1's strike was planned as a one-day action,
but vendor groups decided to prolong it indefinitely
because there was no response from the government, Anatoly
Shumchenko, a representative of the United Council of
Entrepreneurs, told an AFP correspondent on September
4. "The authorities, as before, see us as a cow
to be milked," Shumchenko added.
Vladimir
and Alexei Levonevsky, both juveniles and sons of Valery
Levonevsky, head of the Belarusian Trade Union of Small-Business
Owners, were arrested on August 29 in Mogilev while
distributing a bulletin titled Predprinimatel (The Entrepreneur)
among vendors at a local outdoor market, reported Belapan.
The boys were taken to a police station and charged
with distribution of the printed materials of an unregistered
media outlet. All copies of the bulletin were confiscated.
(Belapan/AFP, Interfax, September 2-5)
IKEA
BACKS OFF PLANS TO INVEST IN BELARUS
Swedish
furniture maker IKEA has backed off on plans to invest
$ 25 million in Belarus after disagreements over signing
a deal on a wood mill it hoped to build, Inga Laikovskaya,
spokeswoman for IKEA in Belarus said on August 31.
The
IKEA disagreement came after the Belarusian government
pressed the company to invest its money in modernizing
existing factories, in which it was only promised a
minority ownership, instead of building a new factory.
Laikovskaya said the company had spent five months trying
to negotiate an acceptable solution. "This illustrates
the investment climate in Belarus," she said.
The
Belarusian government, however, said it was not getting
a fair deal. "The Swedes only wanted to get their
hands on Belarusian forests without giving anything
in return," said government spokesman Ivan Znatkevich.
The
development is the latest case of a foreign company
running into trouble doing business in Belarus. A McDonald's
restaurant in Minsk has been effectively closed after
a leasing dispute, and U.S. Ambassador Michael Kozak
has warned that "it is not safe to invest money"
in Belarus. (The Moscow Times, September 2)
- CALENDAR OF UPCOMING EVENTS -
September
9-19- -OSCE Human Dimension Implementation Meeting
September
16- - -Third anniversary of the disappearance of Gonchar
and Krasovsky
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The
Belarus Update is a weekly news bulletin of the Belarus
Human Rights Support Project of the International League
for Human Rights (www.ilhr.org). The League, now in
its 61st year, is New York-based human rights NGO in
consultative status with the United Nations ECOSOC.
Visit our website for back issues, analysis, and links
to news sites and NGOs in Belarus: www.belarusupdate.org
For queries on how to subscribe or unsubscribe or other
information, contact belarus@ilhr.org
The
Belarus project was established to support Belarusian
citizens in making their case for the protection of
civil society before the international community regarding
Alexander Lukashenko's wholesale assault on human rights
and the rule of law in Belarus.
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