Belarus: Journalist Faces Torture After Abduction

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Exiled Belarusian journalist and government critic, Raman Pratasevich, was unlawfully arrested on 23 May by the Belarusian authorities along with his partner Sofia Sapega, a Russian national. Their Athens-Vilnius flight was diverted and forced to land in Minsk under false pretext. Raman Pratasevich was wanted by the Belarusian authorities on trumped-up “terrorism” charges solely for his journalistic work. If convicted, Raman Pratasevich is facing up to 20 years’ imprisonment. A televised “confession” may indicate torture and other ill-treatment.

The pair were arrested on 23 May 2021 after their Athens-Vilnius flight was forcibly diverted by the Belarusian authorizes to Minsk under false pretext. Raman Pratasevich was charged under Articles 293(1) (“Organization of mass disorders”), 342(1) (“Organization or active participation in group actions that severely violate public order”) and 130(3) (“Incitement of racial, ethnic, religious or other social hatred or enmity”) of the Criminal Code. The grounds for Sofia Sapega’s arrest have not been disclosed. It appears that they have been detained in retaliation for Raman Pratasevich’s critical journalistic work.

There is no evidence that Raman Pratasevich and Sofia Sapega have committed an internationally recognized crime, and their detention is arbitrary. Their arrest was conducted in an unlawful and reckless manner, putting all passengers of the plane at risk when a Belarusian Air Force fighter jet diverted their flight and escorted it to Minsk.

Write to the Prosecutor General urging him to

  • Immediately and unconditionally release Raman Pratasevich, Sofia Sapega and all those who have been arbitrarily detained and imprisoned in Belarus under trumped-up politically motivated charges in retaliation for exercising their rights to freedom of expression and peaceful assembly;
  • Take immediate steps to protect Raman Pratasevich and Sofia Sapega from torture and other ill-treatment, including launching an effective investigation into credible allegations of torture, and ensuring they have immediate, unimpeded and confidential access to a lawyer of their choice.

Write to

Andrei Shved

Prosecutor General of the Republic of Belarus

Vul. Internatsianalnaya 22, 220030 Minsk, Belarus

Email:              info@prokuratura.gov.by

CC:                   mail@mfa.gov.by

press@mfa.gov.by

Telegram:       https://t.me/prokuraturabelarus

VK:                   https://vk.com/prokuraturarbbel

Twitter:           https://twitter.com/prokuraturaby

Facebook:        https://www.facebook.com/prokuraturaby

Instagram:       https://www.instagram.com/prokuraturaby

Salutation:       Dear Prosecutor General

And Copy

Mr Evgeny Russak

Chargé d’Affaires, Embassy for Belarus

350 Sparks St, Suite 908

Ottawa, Ontario K1R 7S8

Fax:                  613 233 8500

Phone:             613 233 9994  or  613 232 0255

E-mail:             canada@mfa.gov.by

Additional Information

Raman Pratasevich is a Belarusian journalist, co-founder of the popular NEXTA Telegram channel, which became a key tool for information-sharing, mobilization and coordination of peaceful protests against widely-disputed presidential election results in August 2020. He left NEXTA in September 2020 and has been editing the Belamova Telegram channel since then.

Since 2019, Raman Pratasevich has been living outside Belarus out of fear for his safety. On 5 November 2020, he was charged with “organization of mass disorder”, “organization of group actions that severely violate public order” and “inciting hatred towards social groups” (these “groups” being police officers and government officials). On 19 November, he was put on the country’s official “List of Terrorists” becoming the first Belarusian citizen included on the list.

On 23 May 2021, Raman Pratasevich was travelling to Vilnius from Athens with his partner Sofia Sapega. When their RyanAir flight was flying over Belarus, it was diverted by Belarusian air traffic controllers and ordered to land in Minsk Airport, ostensibly due to a report of a bomb on board. A fighter jet belonging to the Belarusian Air Forces was deployed “to accompany” the civilian aircraft to Minsk. After landing, Raman Pratasevich and Sofia Sapega were detained by the Belarusian security services, while their Ryanair flight was allowed to proceed to Vilnius, some five hours later. If convicted, Pratasevich is facing up to 20 years’ imprisonment. He is also at serious risk of torture and other ill-treatment.

Charges against Sofia Sapega, who is a Russian citizen and a student at the European Humanitarian

University in Vilnius, are unknown. As of 25 May, there have been no reports of either of them having been visited by a lawyer.

On 24 May, pro-government media issued a video depicting Raman Pratasevich in a room with his face swollen and with what looks like a bruise on his forehead. In the video, he says that he is being held at SIZO-1 detention centre in Minsk and is “cooperating with the investigators” and “giving confessions related to organization of mass disorders in the city of Minsk”. He also says that he is being treated “in a correct and lawful way by the officers”. Such video “confessions” extracted under torture and other ill-treatment or duress have been repeatedly used by the Belarusian authorities to intimidate their opponents and discredit detainees.

Torture and other ill-treatment have been widespread in Belarus against detained opponents of Alyaksandr Lukashenka, who claims to have won the August 2020 elections. During the protests that followed the disputed election, over 30,000 people were arbitrarily detained. Scores were sentenced to so-called administrative detention or given hefty fines. Hundreds complained of torture or other ill-treatment. Several hundreds have been prosecuted under politically-motivated criminal charges, and many have been given long prison sentences following unfair trials. The number of individuals prosecuted under criminal charges as part of the authorities’ crackdown on peaceful dissent is constantly growing.

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If you want Updates on this case, send your request to urgentaction@amnesty.ca with “Keep me updated on Raman Pratasevich” in the subject line.
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