From the DW:
“Under threat from
authorities, Belarusians go into exile”
What do a DJ from Minsk, a worker
from Grodno and a businessman from Brest have in common? Three Belarusians who
felt compelled to leave the country after being threatened by the authorities
shared their stories with DW. As people in Belarus continue to protest against
Alexander Lukashenko and his government, many are leaving the country.
Lithuania and Poland have offered asylum to a number of Belarusians who feared
for their lives. DW spoke to three Belarusians who were scared they would end
up being political prisoners.
'We will go back as soon as
it's safe'
Vlad Sokolovski, aka DJ Vlad, was detained
for 10 days in the notorious Okrestina jail in Minsk after being arrested for
singing the song "Khochu Peremen" ("I Want Changes!") by
the late Russian singer Viktor Tsoi, which has become a symbol of the protests
in Belarus. Sokolovski left Belarus on August 22 and is now in Lithuania:
"I hope that this is just temporary," he told DW. "The Lithuanian
Embassy offered us help on August 17 and 18. At the time, it seemed as if
everything would be OK and we rejected the offer." But on August
21, a police officer called him on his phone and said that he wanted to
interrogate him about some interviews he had given after being released from
Okrestina. He refused, but hours later the police turned up on his doorstep and
he was brought in for questioning. Sokolovski was asked about the interviews,
including a DW interview, in which he had said that deputy interior minister
Alexander Barsukov had visited him in his cell, threatened him with a long
stretch in jail and even hit him in the back. The police threatened him
with a libel suit. "And then Barsukov himself entered the room with some
other people. One of them filmed everything with his phone. It was mainly
Barsukov who did the talking, he was very emotional. I could practically not
say a word. He asked me if I'd been paid. It came down to my either having to
apologize or be sued for slander. I apologized and signed the document. I'll
stick to the story because I've got relatives in Belarus and don't know what
the consequences could be for them." As he was leaving the
interrogation room, he saw a man that he recognized from Okrestina. He had been
in the same cell and was apparently undercover. "I realized that this
would never end and I had to leave the country," Sokolovski said. Within
hours, the Lithuanian embassy had issued him with a visa and an NGO had helped
him find some accommodation for the quarantine period. "Lots of people
offered me jobs." The worst
part of being detained, Sokolovski said, were the five days during which he had
no idea what was happening in the country. "Then we heard a guard in the
corridor saying: 'We're going to turn you into invalids, you won't be able to
walk.' I heard screams all night, with no pause for breath. Everyone was scared
that someone would come in through the door. That was the worst." About
7,000 people were arrested during the protests. Many of them were tortured. Sokolovski
refuses to give up hope: "We will go back to Belarus as soon as it's safe.
I want to be able to work without being scared."
'It will hurt, but not for
long'
(Rovovoy wants to support his homeland from Warsaw.)
Yuriy Rovovoy works for the
fertilizer company Grodno Azot and was the leader of a strike that he called in
solidarity with the protesters. "The decision [on August 24] to leave was
sudden, he told DW. "I tried to get some rest after my night shift but I
was woken up by a knock at the door. My supervisor was there and told me that I
had got some sand in the corridor and on the stairs." He said that he had
a vision of being stuffed into a car and taken away by men in civilian clothing
if he went down to sweep away the sand. So, he decided to leave. A friend drove
him across the border to Poland where he requested asylum. "Friends helped
me rent an apartment where I could spend 14 days in quarantine. I know what I
want to do next: I want to earn my money with my own head and hands. But I
don't want to settle here. In my thoughts, I'm in Belarus. As soon as something
changes, I'll be taking the first bus back to Grodno," he said, adding
that he did not regret going on strike. He said a lot of others hadn't had the
energy at first but they wanted to do the same as him. "These are people
who want to improve their country even though they're striking. Everyone knows
it's necessary. It will hurt but not for long." "I think I can be
more useful from Warsaw than if I hide in the countryside or in my friends'
apartments," he said.
'There's no turning back'
Designer Andrei Voronin has made
a name for himself with his wooden furniture. In August, he joined the
opposition Coordinating Council in Brest but then he was intimidated into
leaving the country. He posted a status update to this effect on August 26 but
would not say where he was now. "After we joined the Coordinating Council,
I was summoned with some other members to the police. They also came into my workshop
where I have machines and tools. They photographed everything and sealed it,
interrogating my colleagues and even searching my parents' home where I'm
registered." Voronin was accused of hiding the fact that he had made
considerable sums of money and threatened with a five-year jail sentence.
"I understood that I had to leave Belarus if I didn't want to become a
political prisoner." So he and his wife packed some belongings and left.
Within two hours they were gone. There were no problems at the border, he says.
"Lukashenko has a sophisticated system of repression," explained
Voronin. "It's not only torture in Okrestina jail. Friends and relatives
are also put under pressure. There are many ways of persecuting a person."
However, he said that he had no regrets about trying to change the system.
"As soon as Lukashenko and his people disappear — and I don't doubt for a
second that that will happen — I will be back because I love Belarus, Brest,
the Belarusians, my friends and family. There has to be a state of law and
human rights. That's not the case at the moment. Right now, whips, shotguns and
rubber bullets are in charge in Belarus." But there is no turning back, he
said. "I think that everyone who had to leave the country will help those
who have stayed."
^ It is sad when a country’s best
and brightest are forced to leave because of a violent Government out to make
their lives unsafe. ^
https://www.dw.com/en/under-threat-from-authorities-belarusians-go-into-exile/a-54817861
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