Belarus’s authoritarian President Alexander Lukashenko has pardoned 28 political prisoners as part of efforts to improve relations with the West.
Mr Lukashenko’s decree marking the country’s Independence Day on Friday announced that 28 people serving prison terms for “extremist crimes”, a term used by the authorities in their sweeping crackdown on dissent, were pardoned on “humanitarian” grounds.
Mr Lukashenko has ruled the nation of 9.5 million with an iron fist for more than three decades, and the country has been sanctioned repeatedly by Western countries — both for its crackdown on human rights and for allowing Moscow to use its territory in the full-scale invasion of Ukraine in 2022.
Mr Lukashenko’s rule was challenged after a 2020 presidential election, when hundreds of thousands of people took to the streets to protest against a vote they viewed as rigged. In an ensuing crackdown, tens of thousands were detained, with many beaten by police. Prominent opposition figures fled the country or were imprisoned.
We mustn’t forget that hundreds of political prisoners remain in Belarusian jails, and all of them must be released
Five years after the mass demonstrations, Mr Lukashenko won a seventh term last year in an election that the opposition called a farce.
Since US President Donald Trump returned to the White House, Mr Lukashenko has released hundreds of political prisoners in a series of US-mediated deals that also lifted some US sanctions.
As part of a deal in March that Washington helped broker, Mr Lukashenko ordered the release of 250 political prisoners, while the US agreed to lift sanctions from two Belarusian state banks and the country’s Finance Ministry, and to remove the top Belarusian potash producers from a sanctions list.
Another deal in April released prominent journalist Andrzej Poczobut in a swap with Poland that saw a total of 10 people freed.
However, Belarus still has 864 political prisoners, including 21 journalists, according to the Viasna human rights centre.
In a report released earlier this week, the UN special rapporteur on the situation of human rights in Belarus, Nils Muižnieks, warned that despite the release of several hundred political prisoners over the past year, there has been no overall improvement in the human rights situation in the country.
“Sustainable progress requires an end to politically motivated repression and accountability for past violations,” he said.
Belarus opposition leader-in-exile Sviatlana Tsikhanouskaya told The Associated Press that while the release of 28 political prisoners will bring relief to their relatives, “we mustn’t forget that hundreds of political prisoners remain in Belarusian jails, and all of them must be released”.