Ailing and silenced in prison, Belarus activist symbolizes the nation's
repression
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[October 14, 2024]
By YURAS KARMANAU
TALLINN, Estonia (AP) — The last time any of Maria Kolesnikova's family
had contact with the imprisoned Belarusian opposition activist was more
than 18 months ago. Fellow inmates at the penal colony reported hearing
her plead for medical help from inside her tiny and smelly cell.
Her father, Alexander Kolesnikov, told The Associated Press by phone
from Minsk that he knows she's seriously ill and tried to visit her
several months ago at the facility near Gomel, where she is serving an
11-year sentence, but has failed whenever he goes there.
On his last attempt, he said the warden told him, “If she doesn't call
or doesn't write, that means she doesn't want to.”
The 42-year-old musician-turned-activist is known to have been
hospitalized in Gomel in May or June, but the outcome was unclear, said
a former prisoner who identified herself only as Natalya because she
feared retaliation from authorities.
“I can only pray to God that she is still alive,” Kolesnikov said in an
interview. “The authorities are ignoring my requests for a meeting and
for letters — it is a terrible feeling of impotence for a father.”
Kolesnikova gained prominence when mass protests erupted in Belarus
after the widely disputed August 2020 election gave authoritarian
President Alexander Lukashenko a sixth term in office. With her
close-cropped hair, broad smile and a gesture of forming her
outstretched hands into the shape of a heart, she often was seen at the
front of the demonstrations.
She became an even greater symbol of defiance in September of that year
when Belarusian authorities tried to deport her. Driven to the Ukrainian
border, she briefly broke away from security forces in the neutral zone
at the frontier and tore up her passport, then walked back into Belarus.
She was convicted a year later of charges including conspiracy to seize
power.
Natalya, whose cell was next to Kolesnikova’s before being released in
August, said she had not heard her talking to guards for six months.
Other inmates heard Kolesnikova's pleas for medical assistance, she
said, but reported that doctors did not come for “a very long time.”
In November 2022, Kolesnikova was moved to an intensive care ward to
undergo surgery for a perforated ulcer. Other prisoners become aware of
her movements because “it feels like martial law has been declared" in
the cellblock, Natalya said. "Other prisoners are strictly forbidden not
only to talk, but even to exchange glances with Maria.”
Her sister, Tatiana Khomich, said she was told by former inmates that
the 5-foot-9-inch Kolesnikova weighed only about 45 kilograms (100
pounds).
“They are slowly killing Maria, and I consider that this is a critical
period because no one can survive in such conditions,” said Khomich, who
lives outside Belarus.
The last time Kolesnikova wrote from prison was in February 2023.
Letters to her “are ripped up before her eyes by prison personnel,” her
sister said, relaying accounts from other former inmates.
Kolesnikova, who before the 2020 protests was a classical flautist who
was especially knowledgable about baroque music, is one of several major
Lukashenko opponents to disappear behind bars.
The prisons department of the Belarusian Interior Ministry refused to
comment on Kolesnikova’s case.
The U.N. Human Rights Committee has repeatedly demanded Belarusian
authorities take “urgent protective measures” in relation to Kolesnikova
and other political prisoners held incommunicado. In September, the
European Parliament demanded that Belarus release all political
prisoners.
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Belarus opposition activist Maria Kolesnikova stands behind bars in
a defendants’ cage in a court in Minsk, Belarus, on Aug. 4, 2021. (Ramil
Nasibulin/BelTA pool photo via AP, File)
Former inmates say Kolesnikova wore a yellow tag that indicates a
political prisoner. That marks them for additional abuse by guards and
officials, rights advocates say.
The human rights group Viasna counts about 1,300 political prisoners in
Belarus, including the group's Nobel Peace Prize-winning founder, Ales
Bialiatsky. At least six have died behind bards.
“It was too late to save Alexei Navalny (from prison in Russia), and it
was too late for six people in Belarus. We and the Western world don't
have much time to save Maria's life,” Khomich said.
Amnesty International has begun a campaign to raise awareness about
Kolesnikova's fate, urging people to take up her plight with Western
officials and politicians.
Other prominent opposition figures who are imprisoned and have not been
heard from in a year or more include Siarhei Tsikhanouski, who planned
to challenge Lukashenko in the 2020 election but was imprisoned; his
wife, Sviatlana Tsikhanouskaya, took his place on the ballot and was
forced to leave the country the day after the vote.
Aspiring opposition candidate Viktar Babaryka also was imprisoned before
the election as his popularity among prospective voters soared.
Kolesnikova was his campaign manager but then joined forces with
Tsikhanouskaya. Prominent opposition figure Mikola Statkevich and
Kolesnikova's lawyer, Maxim Znak, are imprisoned and have not contacted
the outside world since the winter of 2023.
Lukashenko denies Belarus has any political prisoners. At the same time,
in recent months he has unexpectedly released 115 prisoners whose cases
had political elements; those released had health problems, wrote
petitions for pardons and repented.
Belarus is deeply integrated with Russia and some observers believe
Lukashenko is concerned about the extent of his dependence on Moscow,
hoping to restore some ties with the EU by releasing political prisoners
ahead of a presidential election next year.
“Minsk is returning to the practice of bargaining with the West to try
to soften sanctions and achieve at least partial recognition of the
results of the upcoming presidential election,” said Belarusian analyst
Alexander Friedman. “Lukashenko’s regime is interested in not becoming
part of Russia and therefore wants at least some communication with the
West, offering to talk about political prisoners”
Lukashenko’s critics and human rights activists say they see no real
change in government policy, since all leading pro-democracy figures are
still behind bars and authorities have seized three times as many
opposition activists to refill the prisons.
“It is difficult to consider these pardons as a real thaw, since the
repressions continue, but the West should encourage Lukashenko to
continue releasing political prisoners,” Khomich said. “The regime is
sending clear signals to Western countries about its readiness to
release people, and it's very important that (the signal) is heard, and
the opportunity is seized.”
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