Ten Belarusians file criminal case against Lukashenko in Germany
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[May 05, 2021]
BERLIN (Reuters) - Ten Belarusians
have asked Germany's federal prosecutor to open a criminal investigation
against President Alexander Lukashenko for alleged crimes against
humanity during a crackdown on protests.
Lawyers for the 10 who brought the case against the veteran leader and
security officers cited universal jurisdiction laws that allow Germany
to try crimes against humanity committed anywhere in the world.
"All clients have reported of spurious arrests, torture and abuse during
the days of their imprisonment... Each of our clients has suffered
severe health consequences," the lawyers said, adding that they knew of
more than 100 documented cases of state torture in Belarus.
Minsk did not immediately comment. The Belarusian authorities have
characterised the protesters as criminals or violent revolutionaries
backed by the West, and described the actions of law enforcement
agencies as adequate and necessary.
Lukashenko has faced street protests since a presidential election last
August that the opposition says was rigged to enable him to win. Police
have arrested thousands of protesters.
Germany's universal jurisdiction laws were used in February to secure a
guilty verdict against a former member of Syrian President Bashar
al-Assad's security services for abetting the torture of civilians.
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Belarusian President Alexander Lukashenko attends a session of the
Council of the Collective Security Treaty Organization (CSTO) in
Bishkek, Kyrgyzstan November 28, 2019. Sputnik/Alexei Nikolsky/Kremlin
via REUTERS
"Our clients expect from Germany that it also upholds
universal human rights in the case of Belarus," the lawyers said in
the new filing. "They demand justice, namely an independent
investigation and prosecution of these severe crimes."
Opposition leader Sviatlana Tsikhanouskaya, who is in self-imposed
exile in Lithuania, welcomed the legal filing.
"There will never be impunity in Belarus, and today's news is a
clear example of this," she said in a statement.
In March, the United Nations' top human rights body agreed to set up
a team of investigators to gather evidence about the alleged
excessive use of force and torture by authorities in Belarus.
Yury Ambrazevich, the Belarusian ambassador to the U.N. in Geneva,
described the U.N. move as "yet another attempt to interfere in the
domestic affairs of our state".
(Additonal reporting by Kyiv newsroom, Writing by Paul Carrel,
Editing by Timothy Heritage)
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