[Congressional Record Volume 157, Number 69 (Wednesday, May 18, 2011)]
[Senate]
[Pages S3068-S3069]
From the Congressional Record Online through the Government Publishing Office [www.gpo.gov]
BELARUS
Mr. DURBIN. Madam President, it was last February that I went to
Belarus. I had been invited to go to Lithuania to speak to the
Parliament on the 20th anniversary of their independence from the
Soviet Union, and I took a second trip into Minsk, Belarus, a neighbor
nation, because there was a political crisis. It was February, and
since the Presidential election in the December before, there had been
a wholesale effort by Lukashenko, the leader of Belarus, to imprison
his political opponents.
With so many significant events going on in the Middle East, there is
an understandable risk that we lose sight of events happening in
countries such as Belarus. In Belarus, under Aleksandr Lukashenko, if
you have the temerity to run for President or protest a fraudulent
election, you will find yourself thrown in a KGB jail where you are
likely to face torture and harsh prison sentences. If this sounds like
a throwback to the Cold War in the Soviet Union, that is exactly what
it is. Not only is Belarus a throwback to the worst political abuses of
the old Soviet era, but the government's enforcers of this bankrupt
system still call their police the KGB.
On Saturday, the Lukashenko regime continued its nightmare of
totalitarian rule when it convicted one of the country's opposition
Presidential candidates and former Foreign Minister Andrei Sannikov to
5 years in prison. You see, Mr. Sannikov had the temerity to run
against the dictator of Europe, Lukashenko. Because of that, even
having lost the election, he is going to pay for it by spending 5 years
in prison.
This photograph shows Mr. Sannikov in the defendant's cage during his
trial in the Belarusian capital of Minsk. They put him in a cage. Can
anyone think of a more telling symbol of Lukashenko's tyranny than a
sham court proceeding with a KGB cage? His crime? This man ran for
President of his country.
In December last year, after nearly two decades of unchecked power,
Lukashenko decided he would have an open election--in his words, an
open election. Many took him at his word and decided they would run for
President. Apparently, Lukashenko did not care for that idea. His idea
of an election is that no one runs against you. So he staged a sham
election and then arrested 5 of the 6 Presidential candidates and more
than 600 peaceful demonstrators after the election.
I visited Belarus some weeks afterward. I met with the family members
of these brave candidates and activists. I have to tell you, it was a
moving experience. The meeting included members of Mr. Sannikov's
family. This is a photo we took in the office of the U.S. consulate in
Minsk, in Belarus. It shows Kanstantsin Sannikov, Ala Sannikava, and
Lyutsina Khalip. Kanstantsin and Ala are Mr. Sannikov's son and mother.
[[Page S3069]]
Ala told me in tears that her son's arrest led to no contact between
him and his family for weeks, and they denied him a lawyer. After he
was sentenced to 5 years in prison, she told Radio Liberty that she was
proud of her son and that ``he suffered so much for the sake of Belarus
. . . The judicial system has steamrolled our family.''
Lyutsina is the grandmother of the candidate's 3-year-old son Danil.
I wanted to put this photo up because Lukashenko decided it was not
enough to throw this boy's father into prison; he basically said he was
going to remove this boy from the family as part of the punishment they
were going to impose on him for running for President in that country.
You see, not only did they arrest Sannikov, but they arrested his wife
too. She was a journalist--automatically suspect in Belarus. Even more
despicable, they tried to take custody of this little boy, who was
staying with his grandmother. What kind of cruel mind is so afraid of
the free expression of ideas that they would go after this little boy
to further punish the parents--the father who had the nerve to run for
President and the mother who had the nerve to publish in some
underground publication an article critical of Lukashenko.
President Lukashenko's repression and totalitarian regime have been
condemned around the world. Asset freezes and travel bans have been
placed on his enablers and police state enforcers. This Senate and the
European Parliament both have passed sweeping resolutions condemning
the regime and calling for new legitimate elections and the release of
all political prisoners. The families of the detained, the Senate, the
European Parliament, and National Hockey League Hall of Famer Peter
Stastny have called on the International Ice Hockey Federation to
suspend its Belarus-hosted 2014 Ice Hockey Championship until all
political prisoners are unconditionally released. A dictator such as
Lukashenko should not be awarded the international prestige of an event
while prisoners languish in prison for simply exercising their human
rights. I think it is time for the International Criminal Court
prosecutor to look into Lukashenko's regime, most notably for the
allegations of torture.
I conclude by simply saying that I want Mr. Sannikov and his many
brave colleagues in Belarus and their families to know that the United
States will stand by them in their effort to bring a peaceful democracy
to this great nation of Belarus. We commend their bravery and let them
know they are not forgotten.
Madam President, I yield the floor.
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