Mikola Statkevich

[4] In 1978, Statkevich graduated from the Minsk Higher Military Engineering School and served as a member of the Soviet Air Defence Forces in the Murmansk Oblast of the Russian Soviet Federative Socialist Republic, where he was recognised for his capability among his unit, responsible for air defence within the entire Russian Far North.[5] In the early 1990s, Statkevich was one of the leaders of the Belarusian Militarymen Association, a pro-independence union of Soviet officers from Belarus.[7] In 1993 Statkevich was actively protesting against Belarus joining a collective defence treaty with Azerbaijan and Armenia that were at war at a time, to prevent Belarusian soldiers serving in military conflicts outside the country.[13] Viasna Human Rights Centre called the accusations politically motivated and demanded the immediate release of Statkevich.Throughout the 565 days he has spent in detention, Statkevich was not allowed to get access to legal representation or defence and he has been denied all contact with his family.[14] Natalya Radina, editor-in-chief of Charter 97, has called on the Belarusian government to allow Statkevich access to his wife to confirm that he is alive.[17] In December 2020, Statkevich was named among the representatives of the Democratic Belarusian opposition, honored with the Sakharov Prize by the European Parliament.
Eastern Slavic naming customspatronymicfamily nameBelarusian Social Democratic Party (People's Assembly)IncumbentByelorussian SSRSoviet UnionCommunist Party of the Soviet UnionAlma materMinsk Higher Military Engineering SchoolSoviet Air Defence ForcesLieutenant colonelHlybokayeBelarusianRussianromanizedopposition2010 Belarusian presidential electionViasna Human Rights CentreSlutskKościesza coat of armsWołodkowiczGerman occupation of Belarus in World War IIBelarusian partisanBaranavichyBelarusian oppositionVictory DayCommunist Party of Western BelorussiaSoviet repressions in BelarusMurmansk OblastRussian Soviet Federative Socialist RepublicRussian Far NorthEducationCultureBelarusian Militarymen AssociationJanuary EventsLithuaniaAzerbaijanArmeniaDoctor of ScienceFreedom MarchUnion State2004 referendum in BelarusAliaksandr LukashenkaAmnesty Internationalprisoner of conscienceenforced disappearancewidespread protestsRadio Free Europe/Radio LibertySviatlana TsikhanouskayaIhar LosikSergei TikhanovskyViktar BabarykaOffice of the United Nations High Commissioner for Human RightsCharter 97Natalya RadinaEuropean ParliamentSakharov PrizeNovy ChasSocialist InternationalMofokeng, TlalengLawlor, MaryMinsk SpringJeans Revolution2010 protests2011 protestsTeddybear Airdrop Minsk 20122017 protests2020–2021 protestshuman rights issuesrelated deathsinternational reactionsFreedom DayChernobyl WayDay of Solidarity with BelarusTell the Truth!Belarus Free TheatreBelarus Solidarity FoundationRada of the Belarusian Democratic RepublicCyber PartisansCommunity of Railway Workers of BelarusBusly liaciaćCoordinationCouncilSvetlana AlexievichSergei DylevskyPavel LatushkoMaria KalesnikavaOlga KovalkovaLiliya VlasovaMaxim ZnakVladzimir AstapenkaUnitedTransitionalCabinetAliaksandr AzarauValery KavaleuskiValery SakhashchykVadzim KabanchukTatsiana ZaretskayaAlina KoushykVolha HarbunovaMarharyta VorychavaVitold AshurakAles BialiatskiMikalai KhalezinRoman ProtasevichIvonka SurvillaAlexander TaraikovskyValery TsepkaloVeronika TsepkaloAndrei ZeltserBelarusian and Russian partisan movementRail war in BelarusNew Belarus passportWhite-red-white flagBelarusian Social Democratic Party (Assembly)Aleh TrusaŭAlyaksandr KazulinIryna Veshtard