Ales Bialiatski: Who is the Nobel Peace Prize winner?

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Ales BialiatskiImage source, Facebook
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Ales Bialiatski has received numerous international human rights awards

Ales Bialiatski is a prominent Belarusian human rights activist, who is currently being held in prison without trial.

Mr Bialiatski, 60, is the founder of the country's Viasna (Spring) Human Rights Centre, which was set up in 1996 in response to a brutal crackdown of street protests by Belarus's authoritarian leader Alexander Lukashenko.

Viasna provided support for the jailed demonstrators and their families, documenting the use of torture against political prisoners by the Belarus authorities.

"He has devoted his life to promoting democracy and peaceful development in his home country," said the head of the Norwegian Nobel Committee, Berit Reiss-Andersen, announcing this year's three Nobel Peace Prize winners.

Mr Bialiatski - who has received numerous international human rights awards - spent three years in jail after being convicted on tax evasion charges he has always denied in 2011. He was released in 2014.

Image source, Ales Bialiatski/Facebook
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Just before his arrest in 2020, Ales Bialiatski accused the Belarusian authorities of "acting as a regime of occupation"

He was detained again in 2021 following massive street protests over what opposition activists say were rigged elections that kept Mr Lukashenko in power the previous year.

"Government authorities have repeatedly sought to silence Ales Bialiatski," Ms Reiss-Andersen said.

"Despite tremendous personal hardship, Mr Bialiatski has not yielded an inch in his fight for human rights and democracy in Belarus," she added.

Just before his arrest two years ago, Mr Bialiatski wrote on his Facebook page that the Belarusian authorities "are acting as a regime of occupation".

"Hundreds of thousands of demonstrators across all of Belarus, and hundreds [of them are] detained."

Mr Bialiatski's current health is not known.

The activist's wife, Natallia Pinchuk, said she was "overwhelmed with emotion".

"I express my deep gratitude to the Nobel committee and the international community for recognising the work of Ales, his colleagues and his organisation," she told the AFP news agency,

Mr Lukashenko - described in the West as Europe's last dictator - has ruled Belarus with an iron fist since 1994.

He has been allowing Russian President Vladimir Putin, his close ally, to use Belarus's territory to launch deadly missile attacks on Ukraine, and to send Russian ground troops and armoury there there since Moscow's invasion began on 24 February.

Ukraine's Center for Civil Liberties

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Center for Civil Liberties said it was "proud" to receive the Nobel Peace Prize

Alongside, Mr Bialiatski, the Ukrainian Center for Civil Liberties (CCL) is one of the three joint winners of this year's Nobel Peace Prize.

CCL is one of Ukraine's leading human rights organisations. It was founded in 2007, when leaders of human rights groups from nine post-Soviet countries decided to create a cross-border resource support centre in Kyiv.

Since its founding, the CGS has monitored political persecutions in occupied Crimea, Ukraine's southern peninsula annexed by Russia in 2014; documented war crimes and crimes against humanity during the war in Ukraine's eastern Donbas region; and organised international campaigns to release the Kremlin's political prisoners.

After Russia's full-scale invasion of Ukraine in February 2022, CCL has engaged in efforts to identify and document Russian war crimes against the Ukrainian civilian population.

In a tweet after Friday's announcement, CCL said it was "proud to be awarded", external the Nobel Peace Prize.

Russia's Memorial

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Last year, supporters scribbled "Memorial Forever" and "We Love Memorial" outside the organisation's office in Moscow

This year's other Nobel Peace Prize winner is Russian human rights organisation Memorial - which was shut down by the authorities earlier this year.

For over 30 years, Memorial worked to highlight the millions of innocent people executed, imprisoned or persecuted in the Soviet era.

Its work never sat comfortably with the Russian authorities. It was initially cautioned in 2006, and in 2014 it was added to a list of "foreign agents" - a roster of organisations and individuals the government claims receive funding from abroad.

A pretext for closing the group was its failure to mark some of its social media posts with a "foreign agent" disclaimer, which it is legally required to do.

In December 2021, the Supreme Court of Russia ordered Memorial and its regional branches to close because it had violated the 2012 foreign agent law.

There were shouts of "shame!" from those in court as the decision was read out.