Case History
During his career, Pavel Sheremet faced retaliation for criticizing the regime of Belarus President Aleksander Lukashenko. He started his career in 1994 as anchor and producer of Prospekt, a Belarusian news program that was banned a year later by Lukashenko. In 1995, Sheremet started working for Belorusskaya Delovaya Gazeta and the Russian public TV company, ORT. That year, he won the Belarus PEN Center’s Adamovich Prize as best television reporter in Belarus. In 1997, he was a signatory and spokesman at the public of launch of Charter 97, a declaration advocating for democracy and an end to dictatorial regime in Belarus. That same year, he was permanently stripped of his journalistic accreditation.
In 1998, Sheremet moved to Russia and became a special correspondent for ORT’s shows Novosti and Vremya, and later became Vremya’s anchor. In 2000, he began working on documentaries and special projects for Russia’s Channel One (former ORT). In 2008, he officially left Channel One after the company criticized him for accusing the Russian government of autocratic tendencies.
In 2010, Sheremet was deprived of his Belarusian citizenship. Since 2011, he worked as anchor on two Russian channels, REN-TV and OTR. In 2012, he founded the website Istoricheskaya Pravda, or Historical Truth, to promote conversation among historians and students of history. In 2014 he resigned from REN-TV and OTR due to disagreements with the channels’ position on events in Ukraine; in particular, he denounced Russia’s annexation of Crimea and its support of separatists in the Donbas.
From 2012 to 2016, Sheremet authored a blog in Ukrayinska Pravda, an independent news outlet in Ukraine, containing his analyses and interviews with prominent Ukrainian political leaders, businessmen, and artists. He was also an anchor of shows on Ukrainian channels TVi, since 2013, and Radio Vesti, since 2015, including Maundy Thursday, in which he exposed the corruption schemes of Ukrainian oligarchs. In addition, in July 2015, Sheremet started his own project, Dialogues, on Ukraine’s Channel 24, in which he had one-on-one conversations with prominent Ukrainian leaders.
Following Sheremet’s murder in July 2016 and in honor of his legacy, the Eastern Partnership Civil Society Forum created the Sheremet Prize for contributions to media freedom. Its first recipient, announced on November 28, 2016, was Mykola Semena, a Ukrainian journalist reporting on Crimea who was previously on trial in Russia on charges of terrorism, but has since been released and cleared of all charges.
Case Updates
April 1, 2021: Ukrainian police state that they have uncovered new evidence in Sheremet’s case, saying they have secured “documents and audio… of interest in terms of identifying the perpetrators of the crime.”
October 21, 2020: Supporters of the defendants in Sheremet’s murder case clash with police in Kyiv following the court decision to extend pretrial measures for defendants Andriy Antonenko, Yulia Kuzmenko, and Yana Duhar for another two months.
August 11, 2020: The Kyiv Court of Appeals rules that one of the suspects in Shemeret’s murder, Yulia Kuzmenko, should be transferred from a detention center to round-the-clock house arrest. In July, the same court eased pretrial restrictions for another suspect, Yana Duhar.
January 30, 2020: Ukrainian Prosecutor-General Ruslan Ryaboshapka extends the pre-trial investigation of Sheremet’s murder until April 2020. According to the prosecutor, there is not yet sufficient evidence to determine the suspects’ culpability.
December 12, 2019: Officials report that they have detained five suspects in Sheremet’s murder: former nurse in the paratrooper battalion Yana Dugar, doctor and volunteer Yulia Kuzmenko (known as Lisa), musician and volunteer Andrei Antonenko, volunteer Vladislav Grishchenko (known as Buthu), and volunteer Inna Grishchenko (known as Puma).
July 20, 2018: Colleagues, family, friends and human rights activists commemorate the two year anniversary of Pavel Sheremet’s murder. Serving United States Ambassador to Ukraine Marie Yovanovitch states the importance of continuing the investigation into Sheremet’s murder.
October 2, 2017: The National Police classify all court decisions in Sheremet’s case since July 24, 2017 for security reasons.
January 20, 2017: Investigations into Sheremet’s murder continue. Despite releasing video of the suspects, interviewing over 500 people, and indexing 140 terabytes of information, police have yet to find Sheremet’s killers six months after his murder.
July 20, 2016: Pavel Sheremet dies in a car explosion in Kyiv. The Ukrainian authorities classify Sheremet’s death as a murder and begin an ongoing investigation into the incident.