Human rights activist, writer, and Belarus PEN member Ales Bialiatski’s four-and-a-half-year sentence has been upheld on January 24, 2012. He has since been transferred from a detention center in Minsk to a labor camp in the eastern city of Babruysk. PEN International continues to condemn the detention of Bialiatski on charges stemming from his human rights activism and calls for his immediate and unconditional release.

Background Information

Ales Bialiatski was sentenced to four and a half years’ imprisonment on November 24, 2011, on charges of tax evasion. The charges, which stemmed from Bialiatski’s use of personal bank accounts to receive funding for his human rights organization Vyasna (Spring), were described as “politically motivated” in a European Union report.

Bialiatski was arrested on August 4, 2011, and charged with tax evasion, charges which stemmed from his reported use of personal bank accounts in Lithuania and Poland to receive funding from international donors for Vyasna’s human rights activities in Belarus. Vyasna had campaigned for scores of opposition activists persecuted by the government of President Alexsander Lukashenko. It was stripped of its official registration in 2003, making it extremely difficult under Belarus’s economic laws to raise funds.
 
On November 23, 2011, European Union foreign policy chief Catherine Ashton and Commissioner Stefan Fuele called for Bialiatski’s immediate and unconditional release in a joint statement which stated, “We consider the charges against Ales Bialiatski in the ongoing trial a politically motivated pretext to target his important work [for] the benefit of victims of repressions.”

Bialiatski, head of the Vyasna human rights center, was a founding member of the Belarusian literary organization Tutejshyja (The Locals) and served as a former head of the Maxim Bahdanovich Literary Museum in Minsk. He is also the author of a book of essays Jogging on the Geneva (2006).

Write A Letter

  • Condemning the imprisonment of Ales Bialiatski on charges clearly aimed at preventing his legitimate in defense of human rights;
  • Calling for his immediate and unconditional release.

Send Your Letter To

President of the Republic of Belarus

Alyaksandr G. Lukashenko
Karl Marx Str. 38
220016 g. Minsk
Belarus
Fax: + 375 172 26 06 10 or +375 172 22 38 72
Email: [email protected]
Via web site: http://www.president.gov.by/en/press10650.html

Please copy appeals to the diplomatic representative for Belarus in your country if possible.

Please contact PEN if sending appeals after March 30, 2012: ftw [at] pen.org