The UK has today (9 August) sanctioned a further seven
individuals and entities on the fourth anniversary of the deeply
flawed 2020 presidential elections in Belarus in coordinated
action with international partners, taking the total number of
sanctions against Belarus to over 200.
The conduct of the election, which was widely condemned by the
international community, sparked widespread peaceful protests
across the country. These were met by a brutal campaign of
repression and a purging of civil society, independent media and
the democratic opposition at the hands of the Lukashenko regime,
with political prisoners detained in penal colonies. Commanding
officers of four of these penal colonies, who have contributed to
human rights violations and the repression of civil society, have
been hit with UK sanctions today.
Belarus has also provided instrumental support for Russia's
illegal invasion of Ukraine since it began in 2022. It has
allowed the use of its territory and airspace to launch attacks
and provided kit and logistical support, with three Belarusian
entities in the defence and military industrial sector being
added to the UK's sanction list, preventing them from doing
business with UK companies.
Following the designations, Foreign Secretary said:
“Four years on from the brutal scenes we witnessed in
Belarus, Lukashenko's relentless crackdown on civil society has
shown no signs of abating: over 40,000 citizens arrested on
trumped up political charges, civil society and independent media
trampled and a regime with no regard for democracy or human
rights.
“We stand with the people of Belarus and their pursuit of
freedom and democracy and call on the regime to release all
political prisoners immediately and unconditionally.”
The individuals and entities sanctioned today are:
-
Denis Anatolievich TOLSTENKOV: commanding
officer of penal colony 4,
-
Andrei Sergeevich PALCHYK: former commanding
officer of penal colony 1,
-
Filip Vladimirovich STURCHANKA: commanding
officer of penal colony 3,
-
Aleksey Valerievich LAZARENKO: commanding
officer of penal colony 15,
All four individuals are, or have been, responsible for, engaging
in, providing support for and promoting the commission of a
serious human rights violation, repression of civil society and
democratic opposition and actions and activities that undermine
democracy and rule of law in Belarus.
-
OJSC StankoGomel: a Belarusian machine
tool manufacturer exporting goods to Russia for use in the
Russian military industrial sector.
-
JSC NIIEVM: a Government of Belarus affiliated
entity carrying on business in the Belarusian defence
sector.
-
Ruchservomotor LLC: a Belarusian machine tool
manufacturer exporting goods to Russia for use in the Russian
military industrial sector.
Alongside sanctions, the UK is announcing planned funding of
£2.5million this financial year to supporting Belarusian human
rights and civil society causes, including further funding to the
International Accountability Platform Belarus - a coalition that
collect, verify, and preserve evidence of gross human rights
violations constituting crimes under international law allegedly
committed by Belarusian authorities.
Since August 2020, the Belarusian authorities have made over
40,000 politically motivated arrests and pursued at least 12,000
politically motivated criminal cases. According to the Viasna
Human Rights Centre, a Belarusian non-governmental organisation,
1389 political prisoners remain incarcerated in Belarus,
including human rights defenders, journalists, members of the
democratic opposition and trade unionists.
At least six political prisoners have died in detention since
2021, while many others remain held in appalling conditions,
subject to violence, deprived of medical attention and starved of
contact with the outside world.
NOTES TO EDITORS:
- The Belarus sanctions
regime allows the UK government to impose sanctions in
response to human rights violations and actions which repress
civil society in Belarus. Since July 2022, the UK also have the
powers to impose sanctions for those involved in destabilising
or undermining or threatening the territorial integrity
sovereignty or independence of Ukraine. View the full sanctions list.
-
Asset freeze: an asset freeze prevents any UK
citizen, or any business in the UK, from dealing with any funds
or economic resources which are owned, held or controlled by
the designated person and which are held in the UK. It will
also prevent funds or economic resources being provided to or
for the benefit of the designated person or entity.
-
Travel ban: a travel ban means that the
designated person must be refused leave to enter or to remain
in the United Kingdom, providing the individual is an excluded
person under section 8B of the Immigration Act 1971.