Identifier
Created
Classification
Origin
06MINSK1110
2006-10-13 14:29:00
CONFIDENTIAL
Embassy Minsk
Cable title:  

REGIME FINGERS OPPOSITION ACTIVIST FOR 2005

Tags:  PGOV PHUM PREL BO 
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VZCZCXRO2397
PP RUEHDBU RUEHFL RUEHKW RUEHLA RUEHROV RUEHSR
DE RUEHSK #1110/01 2861429
ZNY CCCCC ZZH
P 131429Z OCT 06 ZDK
FM AMEMBASSY MINSK
TO RUEHC/SECSTATE WASHDC PRIORITY 5212
INFO RUEHZL/EUROPEAN POLITICAL COLLECTIVE PRIORITY
RUEHBS/USMISSION USEU PRIORITY 0139
RHMFISS/HQ USEUCOM VAIHINGEN GE PRIORITY
RUEHVEN/USMISSION USOSCE PRIORITY 1302
RUFOADA/JAC MOLESWORTH RAF MOLESWORTH UK PRIORITY
C O N F I D E N T I A L SECTION 01 OF 02 MINSK 001110 

SIPDIS

SIPDIS

E.O. 12958: DECL: 10/13/2016
TAGS: PGOV PHUM PREL BO
SUBJECT: REGIME FINGERS OPPOSITION ACTIVIST FOR 2005
BOMBINGS

REF: 05 MINSK 1163

MINSK 00001110 001.2 OF 002


Classified By: Ambassador Karen Stewart for reason 1.4 (d).

Summary
-------

C O N F I D E N T I A L SECTION 01 OF 02 MINSK 001110

SIPDIS

SIPDIS

E.O. 12958: DECL: 10/13/2016
TAGS: PGOV PHUM PREL BO
SUBJECT: REGIME FINGERS OPPOSITION ACTIVIST FOR 2005
BOMBINGS

REF: 05 MINSK 1163

MINSK 00001110 001.2 OF 002


Classified By: Ambassador Karen Stewart for reason 1.4 (d).

Summary
--------------


1. (C) On October 5, Belarusian law enforcement authorities
arrested prominent youth opposition leader Pavel Krasovskiy
on suspected involvement in two bombings in 2005 that injured
approximately 50 people in northeastern Belarus. If formally
charged and found guilty, Krasovskiy could face the death
penalty. Krasovskiy, a vice chairman of the unregistered
opposition youth NGO Malady Front (MF),had recently
completed a youth activism project with Post's Democracy
Commission funds when he was arrested. Krasovskiy's arrest
appears to be politically motivated and connected to the
criminal prosecutions of other senior MF members. End
summary.

Background: Brothers in Bombs
--------------


2. (U) On September 14 and 22, 2005, two small improvised
explosive devices (IEDs),hidden in beer cans, exploded in
the northeastern city of Vitebsk (reftel). The first bomb
was detonated in a flower box and injured two persons. The
second was packed with nails and other metal shrapnel and
injured as many as 50 persons inside a discotheque.


3. (U) In October 2005, President Lukashenko announced that
two suspects, identified as brothers Vitaliy and Yuriy
Murashko, confessed to detonating the IEDs. However, for
reasons unknown, authorities released the suspects in April

2006.

GOB Links Bombings to Opposition Activist
--------------


4. (U) On October 4, police in Zhodino detained youth
opposition leader Pavel Krasovskiy and reportedly questioned
him for almost eight hours before transferring him to a
detention center in Vitebsk. Authorities claim that
Krasovskiy resembles a composite picture of a person
implicated in the 2005 bombings. If formally charged and
found guilty, Krasovskiy could face the death penalty.


5. (SBU) Krasovskiy is a vice chairman of the unregistered
opposition youth organization Malady Front (MF). On
September 15, authorities placed MF Co-Chairman Dmitriy
Dashkevich into pre-trial detention on charges of running an

unregistered organization. Two other MF leaders, Boris
Goretskiy and Oleg Korbun, face similar charges but to date
remain free. Krasovskiy also currently leads projects
conducted by the Zhodino-based youth NGO called "Zhodzina
Youth Movement 'Right!'." This organization received a grant
of USD 7,000 from Post's Democracy Commission Small Grants
Program in November 2005 to support the development of a
youth civic movement in Zhodzina. The program's duration was
July 26 to September 27, ending just days before Krasovskiy's
arrest.


6. (C) On October 12, Poloff discussed Krasovskiy's case
with MF Acting Co-Chairman Siarzhuk Lisichonak, who described
how Zhodino police had lured Krasovskiy into custody under
false pretenses by summoning him on October 4 for questioning
regarding a brawl that Krasovskiy allegedly witnessed.
Zhodino police transported Krasovskiy to Vitebsk where
authorities interrogated him about the 2005 Vitebsk bombings
for nearly eight hours. Authorities released Krasovskiy but
ordered him to appear at the Vitebsk police department on the
morning of October 5. Police formally arrested Krasovskiy
when he reported to the police station the next day.

The GOB Tightens The Noose with Charges of Murder and Rape
-------------- --------------



7. (C) Lisichonak also confirmed press reports that the
authorities are investigating Krasovskiy's involvement in the
rape and murder of two women in 1999, when Krasovskiy was 16
years old. Krasovsky has also not been formally charged for
this crime.

Possible GOB Motives
--------------


8. (C) Lisichonak insisted that Krasovskiy has no connection

MINSK 00001110 002 OF 002


with the Vitebsk bombings or the Marashko brothers.
Lisichonak speculated that the authorities' efforts to frame
Krasovskiy for the 2005 bombings and the 1999 murders serve
three GOB interests. First, the nature of the alleged crimes
may spare the GOB the international public spectacle of
another politically motivated trial like those of former
presidential candidate Aleksandr Kozulin and the independent
NGO Partnership during the summer. Second, authorities may
be pressuring Krasovskiy to provide testimony against MF
leader Dmitriy Dashkevich and/or plead guilty to the lesser
charge of running an unregistered organization. Third, the
arrests disrupted Krasovskiy's recent efforts to inspire
political activism among disgruntled miners near Soligorsk.


9. (C) Lisichonak maintained that Krasovskiy's arrest was
part of a long GOB campaign to remove Krasovskiy from the
Belarusian political landscape. According to Lisichonak,
authorities in July raided Krasovskiy's youth activist summer
camp in an attempt to obtain evidence that would support BKGB
allegations of training militants. The BKGB never filed
charges but confiscated video recordings that appeared
shortly thereafter on state television.

Comment
--------------


10. (C) The arrest of Krasovskiy for the 2005 bombings is
the latest in a continuing series of repressive "legal"
actions taken against the opposition, in the same vein as the
Kozulin and Partnership imprisonments. It is possible that
the regime targeted Krasovskiy because of the USG's support
of pro-democracy youth groups. Clearly, the arrest suggests
that the Lukashenko regime is prepared to prosecute on
dubious charges any active leader who seeks freedom and
democracy for Belarus.
Stewart