Prosecutor General suspends case initiated over death of protester Raman Bandarenka


The Prosecutor General’s Office of Belarus has suspended the criminal case on the death of Minsk resident Raman Bandarenka. The Minsk activist was savagely beaten on November 11, reportedly by police officers or Lukashenka’s adherers.

Photo: Belsat

The formal reason for the suspension is ‘the impossibility to identify a person involved in the crime’, Nasha Niva reports.

On November 11, plainclothes people arrived at the popular offstreet yard known as ‘Square of Change’ in Charvyakou Street and started to remove white and red ribbons (i.e. symbols in protesters’ colours) fastened on the fences. Raman Bandarenka, who resided in a block of flats not far from it, went out and asked what was going on. Bandarenka was put into a van and driven in an unknown direction.

Then Raman Bandarenka was taken to the neurosurgery unit from Tsentralny district police department where he spent about two hours, then to the neurosurgery unit. According to the doctors, Bandarenka was in ‘extremely critical condition’. He was diagnosed with closed craniocerebral injury, acute subdural head hematomas, brain haemorrhage; on November 12, the young man slipped into a coma and passed away. Some doctors speaking on condition of anonymity confirmed that the patient was battered by pro-government forces. In turn, the Belarusian Interior Ministry claimed that the policemen found ‘a citizen who got injuries in a fight’. When commenting on the situation, Alyaksandr Lukashenka stated that the deceased was ‘drunk’. But the medical papers anonimously published by health workers on Telegram say that there was 0% of ethanol in Bandarenka’s blood.

On the back of the accident, a number of sportspeople and Internet users familiar with the situation identified sports official Dzmitry Baskau and boxer Dzmitry Shakuta (who belong to Lukashenka’s coterie) in photos and videos of the masked persons who brutally attacked Raman Bandarenka.

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After the death was confirmed, thousands of Belarusians came to the Square of Change to pay the last honours to the murdered protester. Memorial events took place across Belarus and abroad.

The General Prosecutor’s Office opened a criminal case over the death of Raman Bandarenka only in February. It was initiated under Part 3 Article 147 of the Criminal Code for intentional infliction of grievous bodily harm resulting in imprudent death. The General Prosecutor’s Office stressed that ‘there was found no involvement of the police officers in the infliction of bodily harm to R. I. Bandarenka’.

It should be noted that three journalists – Belsat TV crew Katsyaryna Andreyeva and Darya Chultsova as well as TUT.BY reporter Katsyaryna Barysevich – were sentenced to the terms from 6 months to 2 years in prison for covering issues related to the murder of Raman Bandarenka.

There are other deaths linked to post-election protests (Alyaksandr Taraykouski, Henadz Shutau, Mikita Kryutsou, Alyaksandr Vikhor, Kanstantsin Shyshmakou, others).

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At least 15: Deaths linked to post-election protests in Belarus
2021.05.27 18:17

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