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Belarus isolates political prisoners to break their spirit

Sarah Rainsford
Eastern Europe correspondent in Warsaw
Getty Images Maria Kolesnikova stands in front of police barricade during 2020 Minsk protestsGetty Images
Maria Kolesnikova, here in 2020, was given an 11 year jail sentence on charges of extremism and trying to seize power

For almost six months, Maria Kolesnikova has been hidden from the world.

Arrested in September 2020, the Belarusian opposition activist has been held in total isolation in prison in the country since last February, with no phone calls or letters and no visits from relatives or her lawyer.

"I wait for news every day… we don't even know if she's alive, really," Maria's sister, Tatsiana Khomich, told the BBC recently in Warsaw.

"I just hope this will not break her, but of course it influences anyone's mind in the end," she said, adding: "It could be considered as torture."

As the authorities in Belarus continue to track down and detain those involved in huge opposition rallies three years ago, they are also now holding the country's best-known political prisoners "incommunicado".

Sergei Tikhanovsky and Viktor Babaryko have vanished into the prison system, too, as well as other key figures from the opposition who are serving long sentences.

In 2020, both men attempted to run against the authoritarian Alexander Lukashenko for president, but were arrested.

"I think they want to break them, mentally," is how Tatsiana explained the isolation now of prominent detainees like her sister.

"They see they are still optimistic and very strong, and they want to break this mindset."

Matthew Goddard  Tatsiana Khomich sits at a desk covered in files and documentsMatthew Goddard
Tatsiana Khomich says her sister Maria has been completely cut off from the outside world for almost six months

Maria Kolesnikova was one of a trio of women who rallied crowds in nationwide protests after Mr Lukashenko claimed yet another landslide election win.

The reaction was like nothing Belarus had ever seen.

The protests against a rigged vote ended in mass arrests, beatings and torture - all thoroughly documented, but still flatly denied by officials.

Maria stood out, not only for her bleached-blonde crewcut and bright red lips, but for the constant smile they formed and her defiantly positive attitude.

It was that spirit that made her rip up her port when the authorities tried to deport her - and that got her arrested.

The last Tatsiana heard from her sister was a postcard from prison dated 2 February 2023.

Maria wrote of longing for the old, free days when she would drink an abundance of coffee and discuss new projects with friends. But she drew a smiley face and a heart, assuring Tatsiana she was "fine", her mood "more upbeat and imioned".

Since then, there's been no word.

Alexander Lukashenko has repeatedly claimed there's "not one" political prisoner in Belarus, because there's no such article in the criminal code.

But the respected human rights group Viasna currently lists almost 1,500 people imprisoned for their peaceful political actions or views.

One of its own activists, just released, was made to spend his last nine days in solitary confinement, sleeping on a damp concrete floor and using his fist for a pillow.

"Three political prisoners have died in prison, so it can be crucial for at least someone to see them," Natalia Satsunkevich told me from Lithuania, where the Viasna activist now lives for safety.

She recalled the artist Ales Pushkin who died recently in custody with the official cause still unknown.

"He'd lost a lot of weight. So it would have been obvious," Natalia suggested.

And the arrests haven't stopped.

Matthew Goddard Inga sits on a sofa with her sonMatthew Goddard
Inga and her son were forced to flee to Poland after her arrest for participating in protests

At a women's shelter in Warsaw, Inga described how police came for her two years after the protests were crushed.

They had found photos of her on a friend's phone, including one from a rally where she was wearing the red and white opposition flag like a cape.

"They said, if you're 'political', then you'll feel it," Inga said, as she recalled her week at Okrestina detention centre in the Belarusian capital Minsk.

There were 14 women in a cell with four beds; no showers, toothbrushes or toilet paper.

"They treated us like animals," she added.

But that isn't the memory that makes her cry. It's when she re moving to pre-trial detention and realising that everyone in her cell was there for their politics.

"We had state TV and it talked as if nothing bad was happening," Inga said. "And we were like, how can you say it's all OK, when so many people are in prison?

"I didn't know people were being imprisoned in such numbers. Then you get there and everyone's political. It's a nightmare," she confided, crying quietly. "We're sent to prison, just for our words."

Sentenced to house arrest, Inga fled the country earlier this year with the help of activists. She didn't tell her son where they were going until they were safely in Europe. She couldn't risk him revealing the secret.

She now s a rally in central Warsaw every Sunday to sing Belarusian songs, other political prisoners and chant against the war their country is helping to wage on Ukraine.

Only a handful turn out, although the number of Belarusian exiles in Poland is growing all the time.

"I think that's a betrayal," organiser Anna Fedoronok told me. "If we forget all the people in prison, then we're betraying them."

"We're free here. If we don't speak out, who will":[]}