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		U.N. rights chief urges Belarus neighbours to protect asylum-seekers
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		 [September 24, 2021] 
		By Stephanie Nebehay 
 GENEVA (Reuters) - The United Nations human 
		rights chief called on Belarus' neighbours on Friday to protect asylum 
		seekers after four people died near the Polish border earlier this week 
		amid a surge in illegal migration across the European Union's eastern 
		frontier.
 
 Michelle Bachelet also told the U.N. Human Rights Council that 
		Belarusian authorities had clamped down on fundamental freedoms, with 
		arrests of activists and journalists "on what routinely appear to be 
		politically-motivated charges".
 
 "I take this opportunity to remind all governments that under 
		international law, no-one should ever be prevented from seeking asylum 
		or other forms of international protection," Bachelet told the Geneva 
		forum.
 
 Illegal migrants and asylum-seekers are entitled to food, water and 
		medical care and any asylum claims should be examined individually, she 
		said.
 
 Poland, Lithuania and the EU have accused Belarus of encouraging 
		migrants, mostly from Iraq and Afghanistan, to cross the borders in 
		order to put pressure on the bloc over sanctions Brussels imposed on 
		Minsk over human rights abuses.
 
		 
		Polish officials said on Monday three people had died after crossing 
		into Poland from Belarus, while a fourth person died inside Belarus. 
		Authorities on both sides gave no cause of death.
 On Friday Polish border guards reported a fifth death - of an Iraqi man, 
		probably from a heart attack - in the border area.
 
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			 A view of a vehicle next to a fence built by Polish soldiers on the 
			border between Poland and Belarus near the village of Nomiki, Poland 
			August 26, 2021. REUTERS/Kacper Pempel/File Photo 
            
			
			 
            POLICE BRUTALITY
 On the political situation in Belarus, Bachelet said more than 650 
			people were believed to be imprisoned due to their beliefs and there 
			had been no genuine investigations into police brutality and 
			mistreatment.
 
 Yury Ambrazevich, Belarus ambassador to the U.N. in Geneva, rejected 
			her report as being full of "unfounded statements and false 
			accusations".
 
 Echoing Bachelet's concerns, U.S. ambassador Benjamin Moeling 
			denounced what he called "politically-motivated trials and severe 
			sentences that have followed". The EU's envoy, Lotte Knudsen, also 
			sharply criticised the Minsk authorities.
 
 President Alexander Lukashenko, who has ruled Belarus since 1994, 
			has cracked down hard on protesters since claiming victory in a 
			presidential election in August 2020 that his critics say was 
			rigged. He denies the accusations.
 
 (Additional reporting by Matthias Williams in Kiev; editing by 
			Gareth Jones)
 
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