An Olympic swimmer who opposed Lukashenko was sentenced in absentia to 12 years in prison

A man holds a Belarusian flag during protests once morest Lukashenko’s re-election (AFP)

The judiciary issued Belarus A 12-year prison sentence in absentia once morest Alessandra Herassemenia, former Olympic swimmer and anti-president activist Alexander LukashenkoOn charges of “forming an extremist organization,” a human rights organization announced Monday.

The “Viasna” organization said that a court in Minsk issued this judgment in absentia once morest Herasemenia (36 years old) at the end of a trial that began on December 19.

Herasemenya, who won silver and bronze medals at the Olympic Games (2012 and 2016), retired from sports in 2019, and has since been living in exile, where she founded a human rights organization opposing President Lukashenko.

Viasna added, in a statement on its website, that the court also convicted the former swimmer of “calling for sanctions once morest Belarus” and “publishing false information regarding the events” that shook the country in 2020.

In 2020, Belarus witnessed unprecedented protests once morest the re-election of President Alexander Lukashenko, who has been in power since 1994.

In the midst of these protests, Herasemenya, along with other athletes from her country, signed an open letter calling for “free elections.” She also founded the “Belarusian Sports Solidarity Foundation,” an organization that provides financial and legal assistance to Belarusian athletes persecuted by the authorities.

However, the Belarusian authorities were quick to consider this organization an “extremist organization”.

In April 2021, Herasemenya put the gold medal she won in the 2012 World Swimming Championships up for auction. On that day, the medal was sold for 13,500 euros, and this amount was allocated to support the opposition athletes.

On the other hand, the “Viasna” organization announced in a separate statement that a trade union official named Alexander Yaroshuk was sentenced on Monday to four years in prison for “serious disturbance of public order” in 2020.

For more than two years, the Belarusian authorities have waged a relentless campaign of repression, as a result of which the overwhelming majority of opposition figures in the country are either in prison or in exile.

(AFP)

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