ILHR NEWS FLASH -- BELARUS -- OCTOBER 14, 1998
STREMKOVSKAYA TO BE DISBARRED IN MINSK
On October 13, Vera Stremkovskaya, a prominent Belarusian civil defense lawyer
was informed that she will be reprimanded and disbarred and that her license to
practice law will be revoked. The reason given by Vice-Minister of Justice
Golovanov was her recent trip to the United States and her pronouncements on the
human rights situation in Belarus. The Justice Ministry's actions against
Stremkovskaya were based, she says, on a letter received from the Ministry of
Foreign Affairs. The letter, says Stremkovskaya, was drafted by two
representatives of the Belarusian Mission to the UN who attended the League's
Breakfast Briefing on the Rule of Law in Belarus during Vera Stremkovskaya's and
Mikhail Pastukhov's U.S. visit on September 23. This same letter will be sent to
the Minsk Lawyers' Collegium and she will be reprimanded and relieved of her
license to practice.
According to Stremkovskaya, the letter of denunciation, which she was allowed to
read at the meeting with Golovanov, was sent to the Belarusian Ministry of
Foreign Affairs by Uladzimir Vantsevich and Igar Gubarevich of the Belarusian
Mission to the UN (of the 6th and 3rd Committees respectively). The letter
described Stremkovskaya and Pastukhov as fierce oppositionists, however, to our
knowledge, neither Vera Stremkovskaya nor Mikhail Pastukhov belong to any
opposition political parties. The two Belarusian representatives also noted the
lawyers' critical remarks at the ILHR Breakfast Briefing of September 23 on the
human rights situation in Belarus as well as their criticism of the current
Belarusian laws and constitution. The Belarusian representatives also protested
against the one-sided nature of the briefing, maintaining that only thanks to
their presence was the "balance of forces" preserved implying that otherwise
people would have believed the oppositionists' falsified version of the facts.
It is worth noting that the Belarusian UN Mission representatives used
Pastukhov's and Stremkovskaya's presence in such a meeting and their ability to
travel freely without reprisals awaiting them back home as an example of the
progress Belarus has made in human rights. Contrary to their assurances,
Stremkovskaya is now being reprised, though there was nothing unethical or
illegal in her behavior in the U.S. In addition, now that Stremkovskaya has been
called to answer for her U.S. trip, she has also been denied freedom to travel
to Prague for a conference she had planned to attend from October 19 through 23.
According to Stremkovskaya, during their conversation Vice-Minister Golovanov
implied that she might formally denounce ex-Constitutional Justice Mikhail
Pastukhov in order to improve her own situation. Stremkovskaya refused to do any
such thing. In view of the situation, Ms. Stremkovskaya has asked the League and
all other organizations she visited on her recent trip to the U.S. to publicize
the news of her being disbarred. She also asks that the League and other human
rights and law-related NGOs and government organizations take action in the form
of writing letters of support on her behalf to the Ministry of Justice and to
the Minsk Lawyers' Collegium.
The process of disbarring Stremkovskaya has just begun. The League will keep you
informed of new developments.
For more information contact Matvei Yankelevich, Belarus Project Manager,
International League for Human Rights. Phone 212-661-0480
Email belarus@ilhr.org
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