Friday, May 27, 2022

Three Belarusian women win prestigious German award

Belarusian pro-democracy activists Sviatlana Tsikhanouskaya, Veronika Zepkalo and Maria Kolesnikova were awarded this year's Charlemagne Prize during a ceremony in Aachen yesterday.

Tsikhanouskaya and Zepkalo are currently living in exile and accepted their awards in person. But  Maria Kolesnikova is serving an 11 year sentence in Belarus, so her award was collected by her sister.


The prize has been awarded since 1950 and is named after Charlemagne, known historically as the 'father of Europe.  The prize recognises work done in the service of European unification.


German Foreign Minister Annalena Baerbock attended the ceremony, praising the three women as the 'bravest women in Europe.

The three women have become the face of Belarus' opposition movement. Tsikhanouskaya was a political novice and stay-at-home mother of two when her husband Siarhei Tsikhanouski, who had launched a presidential campaign against Lukashenko, was arrested.


She took his place in the presidential election and is widely believed to have won the August 2020 vote, which Lukashenko claimed to win.


In Aachen, Tsikhanouskaya called for European unity in light of the Russian invasion of Ukraine, accusing both Belarus and Russia of trying to divide the West.


"Without free Belarus there will be a constant threat to Ukraine and to our western neighbours," Sviatlana Tsikhanouskaya said.


She demanded that Russia withdraw all troops from Belarus. The Belarusian regime is collaborating with Russia, she said, but the people of Belarus support Ukraine with some fighting on the side of Kyiv.


Tsikhanouskaya also dedicated her award to the Belarusian people engaged in a peaceful struggle against tyranny, as well as "every child waiting for their mother or father to be released from prison."


German Foreign Minister Annalena Baerbock spoke at the ceremony, vowing that Germany "will not rest" until Lukashenko's regime ends its repression against the Belarusian people.


"Lukashenko proceeds against his critics with shocking severity", Baerbock said. "In doing so, the Russian and Belarusian regimes are cynically holding in contempt precisely the things for which the three of you are fighting: Peace, freedom, democracy, and human rights.”


Baerbock acknowledged that Europe had been wrong in how it dealt with Lukashenko's regime. "The belief that cooperation is possible to a certain extent even with dictators like Lukashenko may have made us act too hesitantly toward the Belarusian regime," she said.


"For me as German foreign minister, it is clear that in the future we have to look more critically, act more decisively when our values and freedom are being attacked," she added.

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