Tatsiana Zaretskaya

[2][3] On 2 November 2022, she announced that she had resigned from the United Transitional Cabinet of Belarus as a result of weeks of threats to family, friends and employees.She stated that there had been "a barrage of anonymous messages, letters, calls, direct threats" to "friends, relatives, employees" and "partners and investors" of her company.Zerkalo stated that the Cabinet had launched an internal investigation into Zaretskaya's Laava Tech business; this was denied by Aliaksandr Azarau.[7] Nasha Niva stated that it didn't receive any response from Tsikhanousakaya's office regarding the method of selecting Zaretskaya for the Cabinet position.Based on its investigation, Nasha Niva expressed scepticism about the technological claims and the financial success of Laava Tech.
BusinesspersonUnited Transitional CabinetTallinnInternet of thingsZerkaloNasha NivaAliaksandr AzarauForbes 30 Under 30Innovators Under 35ForbesSviatlana TsikhanouskayaBelsatZerkalo.ioBelarusian oppositionMinsk SpringFreedom MarchJeans Revolution2010 protests2011 protestsTeddybear Airdrop Minsk 20122017 protests2020–2021 protestshuman rights issuesrelated deathsinternational reactionsFreedom DayChernobyl WayDay of Solidarity with BelarusTell the Truth!Charter 97Belarus Free TheatreBelarus Solidarity FoundationRada of the Belarusian Democratic RepublicViasna Human Rights CentreCyber PartisansCommunity of Railway Workers of BelarusBusly liaciaćCoordinationCouncilSvetlana AlexievichSergei DylevskyPavel LatushkoMaria KalesnikavaOlga KovalkovaLiliya VlasovaMaxim ZnakVladzimir AstapenkaUnitedTransitionalCabinetValery KavaleuskiValery SakhashchykVadzim KabanchukAlina KoushykVolha HarbunovaMarharyta VorychavaVitold AshurakViktar BabarykaAles BialiatskiMikalai KhalezinIhar LosikRoman ProtasevichMikola StatkevichIvonka SurvillaAlexander TaraikovskySergei TikhanovskyValery TsepkaloVeronika TsepkaloAndrei ZeltserBelarusian and Russian partisan movementRail war in BelarusNew Belarus passportWhite-red-white flag