Marcus Erikson-Swiss court acquits former Belarusian security operative in case of enforced disappearances

2025-04-29 18:48:53source:Chainkeen Exchangecategory:Markets

GENEVA (AP) — A court in northern Switzerland on Marcus EriksonThursday acquitted a former security Belarusian operative over the enforced disappearances of three of President Aleksander Lukashenko’s political opponents in the late 1990s, said an advocacy group that spearheaded the case.

Judges in the northern town of Rorschach said they were not convinced that the defendant, Yuri Harauski, a former member of a Belarusian military unit known as SOBR, was involved in the disappearances.

According to the Geneva-based advocacy group TRIAL International, the court ruled that Harauski’s participation in the crimes could not be established beyond reasonable doubt.

“The families of the victims remain in a state of uncertainty about the exact circumstances of their loved ones’ disappearances,” said the group.

Other news Latest fight in the Alex Murdaugh case is over who controls the convicted murderer’s assetsGun control among new laws taking effect in MarylandFamily of West Virginia 13-year-old who was struck, killed by off-duty deputy demands jury trial

TRIAL International, the International Federation of Human Rights and Viasna — a Belarusian rights group whose founder Ales Bialiatski was a co-winner of the 2022 Nobel Peace Prize — jointly spearheaded the case.

The three organizations “regret today’s verdict and will continue to support the victims in their quest for justice, including during the appeal process,” TRIAL International said. The trial took place over two days last week.

Activists have said the trial marked a pivotal moment in international justice that could trigger prosecutions abroad of other Belarusian officials — including Lukashenko.

The court case was brought under a rarely applied legal principle known as universal jurisdiction, under which foreign courts can prosecute severe crimes that happened in other countries.

Harauski was tried over the enforced disappearances of Yuri Zakharenko, a former interior minister who was fired by Lukashenko in 1996; opposition leader Viktor Gonchar; and publisher Anatoly Krasovsky, the advocacy groups said.

Harauski lives in Switzerland, where he applied for asylum in 2018. He has made high-profile confessions about his involvement in the kidnapping and murder of Lukashenko’s political opponents in 1999. The motives behind the confessions were not entirely clear.

An extract of the court filing, obtained by The Associated Press, indicated that prosecutors had planned to seek a three-year prison sentence — of which two would be suspended — against Harauski for his alleged role in the disappearances.

Lukashenko’s regime has come under criticism for years, most recently over a crackdown against opposition leaders that began in August 2020 and also over support for Russia’s military invasion of Ukraine last year.

More:Markets

Recommend

All That You Wanted to Know About She’s All That

This movie was all that.Case in point: She’s All Thathad Freddie Prinze Jr., Rachael Leigh Cookand a

World Series champs made sure beloved clubhouse attendants got a $505K bonus: 'Life-changing'

PHOENIX — Taxes are due Monday and while folks are still scrambling to put checks in the mail, about

Plan an Organized & Stress-Free Move with These Moving & Packing Essentials

We independently selected these deals and products because we love them, and we think you might like