Journalist Łosik’s wife, four other women released under amnesty

July 25, Pozirk. Darja Łosik, Tamara Astreika, Śviatłana Łupač, Kaciaryna Madziankova and Palina Pałavinka were released from Homiel’s prison on July 3 under an amnesty program, the Homiel branch of the Viasna Human Rights Center reports.
Some of them reportedly could have been pardoned.
In January 2023, authorities sentenced Łosik to two years in prison for an interview with Belsat TV channel deemed extremist in Belarus.
Her husband, RFE/RL contributor and blogger Ihar Łosik, is serving 15 years in prison for alleged incitement to hatred and mass riots.
Human rights defenders say that his persecution is politically motivated.
The couple has a four-year-old daughter.
Astrejka and Madziankova were serving unspecified prison terms on protest-related charges, while Pałavinka was sentenced to two and a half years in December 2022.
Śviatłana Łupač, daughter of exiled journalist Dźmitryj Łupač, was given 18 months in prison last year on similar charges.
In January, the interior ministry blacklisted her as an extremist.
On July 2, Łukašenka announced the release of his critically ill opponents and signed the amnesty law marking the 80th anniversary of Belarus’ liberation from the Nazis.
Rights groups said 18 political prisoners were released the next day, four women and 14 men, including Ryhor Kastusioŭ, the cancer-stricken Belarusian Popular Front leader who was serving a 10-year prison sentence.
The activists withheld the names of the others for safety reasons.
Four days ago, Valancin Sukała of the Supreme Court announced the release of some 2020 protesters under the amnesty program.
Also read: Supreme Court chairman hints at possible release of more political prisoners
- Politics, SportBelarusian, Russian figure skaters barred from World ChampionshipsThe material is available only to POZIRK+
- PoliticsCrackdown on Belarusian publishers reported in MinskThe material is available only to POZIRK+
- Politics
- Society, Sport
- Society
- Society
- PoliticsPolitically motivated convictions reported in Minsk, HrodnaThe material is available only to POZIRK+
- Politics, SecurityBelarus says it downs drones as Kyiv accuses Minsk of aiding Russian attacksThe material is available only to POZIRK+
- PoliticsMinsk to negotiate visa free travel to Saudi Arabia for officialsThe material is available only to POZIRK+
- Economy, PoliticsBelarus holds 496 Lithuanian trucks, 575 semi-trailers - LINAVAThe material is available only to POZIRK+
- Economy, Security, SocietyThree men jailed in Lithuania for smuggling cigarettes from BelarusThe material is available only to POZIRK+
- PoliticsKGB adds eight to list of terroristsThe material is available only to POZIRK+
- EconomyVacancies for foreigners rise by nearly 17 percent in Belarus over a monthThe material is available only to POZIRK+
- Security, SocietyLithuania turns nine African migrants back to BelarusThe material is available only to POZIRK+
- Politics, SecurityConscription-age men given 24 hours to report for military trainingThe material is available only to POZIRK+
- PoliticsFaction Biełarusy quits Coordination CouncilThe material is available only to POZIRK+
- PoliticsOpposition leader urges OSCE PA to establish working group on BelarusThe material is available only to POZIRK+
- Economy
- PoliticsEU Delegation welcomes Statkievič’s release, urges Minsk to free all jailed dissidentsThe material is available only to POZIRK+
- Politics



