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Belarus Introduces Death Penalty for 'Attempted' Terrorism

Belarusian President Alexander Lukashenko. president.gov.by

Belarus has introduced the death penalty for attempts to carry out acts of terrorism, Russian news agencies reported Wednesday, charges that several opposition activists face in the ex-Soviet country.

Belarus — a close ally of Russia that has supported its military offensive in Ukraine — is the only country in Europe that continues to carry out executions despite calls for a moratorium.

"Lukashenko signed a law on the possibility of the death penalty for an attempted terrorist act," the RIA Novosti news agency reported, citing an online government portal for legal information.

It said the law would come into force 10 days after its publication.

Two years ago, Belarus faced historic protests against the re-election of strongman leader Alexander Lukashenko, who has ruled the country with an iron fist for over two decades. 

Thousands of activists were arrested in the crackdown and the key leaders of the opposition movement are now either jailed or in exile.  

Among them was Svetlana Tikhanovskaya, a political novice who ran against Lukashenko in the August 2020 polls in place of her jailed husband. 

She now leads the Belarusian opposition from exile in Lithuania, while her husband Sergei Tikhanovsky is serving 18 years in jail on what supporters believe are politically motivated charges. 

Last March, Belarusian prosecutors charged Tikhanovskaya in absentia with "preparing acts of terrorism as part of an organized group," according to Belarusian state news agency Belta.

Tikhanovskaya denounced Wednesday the decision of the "lawless regime" to expand the use of the death penalty, saying it targeted anti-government activists.

'Political killings'

"This is a direct threat to activists opposing the dictator and the war," Tikhanovskaya tweeted. 

"I urge the international community to react: sanction lawmakers and consider any tools to prevent the political killings," she added.

Belarus and its leadership are already under a litany of Western sanctions over its handling of the opposition protest and over its support for Moscow's campaign in Ukraine.

But many opposition activists remain behind bars in Belarus awaiting trial.

On Wednesday, a Belarusian court in the city of Grodno started a closed-door hearing in the case against 12 activists accused of "preparing acts of terrorism," according to Belarusian rights group Vyasna.  

Among them is veteran activist Nikolai Avtukhovich, who has already served more than seven years in jail. The 59-year-old faces a litany of other charges, including treason.

The activists are accused of setting a policeman's home and car on fire, and burning another policeman's car in the autumn of 2020. 

Capital punishment in Belarus — carried out by shooting — is highly secret and there are no official statistics. 

The last known death sentence in Belarus was carried out against Victor Pavlov, who was arrested in January 2019 on suspicion of murder and larceny, according to the UN Human Rights Committee. 

The committee had called for his execution to be halted while it examined his allegations of torture in detention but said in a statement in March that his family had been informed it had taken place, without any information about when he was executed.

Pavlov was the 15th person executed in Belarus since 2010 while their case was still pending before the committee, it said.

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