Rally of solidarity with political prisoners Andżelika Borys, Andrzej Poczobut held in Białystok


Andżelika Borys, Chairperson of the Union of Poles in Belarus, and Andrzej Poczobut, a Hrodna-based journalist and Polish minority activist, have been behind bars for nine months.

Rally of solidarity with Belarusian political prisoners in Białystok. 23 December 2021.
Photo: Belsat

Once a month, the representatives of the Belarusian diaspora in Białystok and unindifferent Poles come to the city centre and gather together in tfront of the monument to Jerzy Popieluszko, a prominent Catholic priest murdered by the special services of communist Poland, to express their solidarity with the people imprisoned by the Lukashenka regime. Such event took place again on December 23.

Rally of solidarity with Belarusian political prisoners in Białystok. 23 December 2021.
Photo: Belsat

Andrzej Poczobut and Andżelika Borys refused to file a pardon petition to Alyaksandr Lukashenka. The Belarusian human rights community recognised them as political prisoners.

In early June, Poland’s Ministry of Foreign Affairs stated that three Polish minority activists from Belarus – Irena Biernacka, Maria Tiszkowska and Anna Paniszewa – arrived in Poland on May 25 ‘as a result of efforts by Polish diplomatic and consular services’. According to our information, the Belarusian authorities made the three women’s return to the country impossible by imposing travel restrictions on them before taking the arrestees to the Belarusian-Polish border.

Rally of solidarity with Belarusian political prisoners in Białystok. 23 December 2021.
Photo: Belsat

In the spring of 2021, the Belarusian Prosecutor General’s Office initiated a criminal case against Andżelika Borys and other members of the Union of Poles in Belarus.

Rally of solidarity with Belarusian political prisoners in Białystok. 23 December 2021.
Photo: Belsat

They are charged under Art. 130-3 of the Criminal Code (‘deliberate actions aimed at inciting national and religious hatred according to national, religious, language, other social affiliation, as well as through justifying Nazism, which were committed by a group of persons’). According to them, the Polish activists’ recent aсtivity, i.e. holding some events, is relevant to ‘the rehabilitation of Nazism and justifying the genocide of the Belarusian people’.

On March 25, homes of some members of the Union of Poles in Belarus were raided as part of the criminal case. Belarusian security officers made unexpected visits to Hrodna-based journalist Andrzej Poczobut (he was later arrested and taken to Minsk for interrogation); Maria Tiszkowska, the director of the UPB public school in Vaukavysk; Irena Biernacka, the head of the Lida branch of the Union. The police also came to the Polish public school and the headquarters of the Union of Poles in Hrodna. The search of the office lasted eight hours, from 9 am to 5 pm. Poczobut, Biernacka, Tiszkowska, Borys were taken into custody.

On March 12, Anna Paniszewa, the director of Polish School, was arrested on her way to Belarus from Poland. Shortly before the detention, Paniszewa posted an appeal to the public; she believes that the authorities fabricate the charges, aiming at the liquidation of the school.

Update
What protests in Belarus, Belsat TV, Poles’ Union have in common: Kremlin’s version
2020.11.03 16:58

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