Belarusian human rights activist and Nobel Peace Prize laureate Ales Bialiatski, who was recently released from prison, said it was impossible to reach an agreement with President Alexander Lukashenko.
“Knowing this regime and Lukashenko since the beginning of his political career, I have no doubt that it is impossible to agree with him on ending repression and returning Belarus to even minimal democratic norms,” Bialiatski said in Vilnius on Thursday.
He also said it was impossible “to tear him away from Russia’s sphere of influence, because he is part of that sphere”, adding that Lukashenko was “destroying the independence of Belarus”.
Bialiatski was attending a commemoration at the Seimas marking the 40th anniversary of the Chernobyl nuclear disaster.
“Forty years ago, the Chernobyl catastrophe occurred; 20 percent of Belarusian territory was covered in radiation, and a million people were forced to leave their homes. [...] Chernobyl became a painful trauma for the entire Belarusian nation, but when Lukashenko came to power, a political Chernobyl began in Belarus,” the Nobel laureate asserted.
“Although several hundred political prisoners have been released from Lukashenko’s prisons in recent years, including through forced deportations – which I also experienced – about 900 people are currently imprisoned for their political views.
“Every day brings information about new political detentions, searches, and sentences. These are planned actions by the regime intended to intimidate society and recruit new lives for political bargaining with Western democratic countries,” Bialiatski said.
The former political prisoner said the Belarusian people have not been brought to their knees and are resisting Russian aggression against Ukraine, which is why Lukashenko did not dare send troops into Ukrainian territory.
Bialiatski said he supports Lithuania’s initiative to prosecute Lukashenko, often called Europe’s last dictator, for complicity in war crimes.

The Nobel laureate thanked Lithuania for providing refuge to thousands of Belarusians forced to flee their country.
On the other hand, he requested that their rights in Lithuania not be equated with those of Russian citizens.
“I hope that the Lithuanian state will continue to favourably resolve the issues of their legalisation and adaptation, without equating Belarusians to Russian citizens,” Bialiatski said.
Furthermore, he urged the continuation of sanctions against the Minsk regime.
“If it were not for these sanctions, I would still be in prison,” he said.
Bialiatski was released from prison in Belarus last December along with 121 other political prisoners. US presidential representatives have been negotiating with the Minsk regime for the release of political prisoners.



