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Observers noticed a strange-arranged military vehicle during yesterday’s events in Minsk. Another photo was taken later and turned perplexity into a reasonable suggestion. Yes, it seems to be a kind of government-budget military hostel.
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“Hands off our children!” participants of the “Wisdom March” are chanting. The column is marching along Nezavisimosti avenue.
The Wisdom March in TUT.by photos
This is Yahor Fatyhau - a 4th grade student of the Belarusian Entrepreneurship Institute. The police broke his leg after yesterday's march.

Now he is stable and has been transferred to a common ward. No one is watching him, although he was delivered to the hospital under escort. Besides a broken leg, he has many other injuries, but the previously published information about severe head trauma turned out to be false.
“EITHER I LEAVE THE COUNTRY, OR THEY WILL THROW ME OUT, IN ONE PIECE, OR SEVERAL” ● Maria Kalesnikava told the story of her abduction.

On the first Monday of September, Maria was kidnapped in the center of Minsk. Men with no identification put her into a van and took off. She was only found two days later when she was in jail. Not the musician and activist describes what happened and named the people who tried to send her away from Belarus, TUT.BY writes.

“After I was abducted, they forced me into the cabinet of Nikolai Karpenkov, the head of the Organized Crime and Corruption Department of the Ministry of Internal Affairs. He screamed, insulted me, threatened me. The ‘discussion’ happened in the presence of two more gentlemen: Gennadiy Kazakevich, the First Deputy Minister of Internal Affairs, and Andrei Pavlyuchenka, head of the Operations and Analytics Center. They gave me an ultimatum: either I leave the country and do whatever I want abroad, or they will throw me out - in one piece, or several. Break my fingers, lock me up for 25 years, and make me sew shirts for the siloviki. The ‘talk’ took several hours, including breaks for ‘rest’ in a solitary cell.

She was then transferred to the KGB detention center, searched, and put in a solitary cell. A couple of hours later, another talk happened, with three agents present. One of them was Konstantin Bychek, head of the Investigative Department of KGB.

‘An engaging discussion’ lasted till late at night. They asked a lot about me, who writes the statements, why do I claim election fraud, what gives me reasons to state that Tsikhanouskaya won, did I organize unsanctioned mass events, did I interfere with the work of the state agencies, do I have any connections with Nexta (a popular anti-regime blogger - translator’s remark), what are the goals of the Coordination Council? Do I understand that I am responsible for the people being beaten and killed, not those who gave such orders? They really think that foreign ‘puppeteers’ attempting to influence the situation in Belarus and people who protest are criminals, not peaceful Belarusians. The things that are happening: brutal dispersion of peaceful citizens, beatings of their compatriots, mass repressions against everyone who participated in the election campaign are criminal. The regime doesn’t hear the will of the people.

Yes, I was afraid. I was really afraid of being sent to prison or killed and dismembered. But the most important thing here is to understand that this ‘chaos and disarray,’ this terror, violence, and endless crimes against the Belarusian people must end, and the Belarusian nation must become free. Not for a second did I regret my decision to stay in the country. I am not afraid of a criminal case or prison sentence, and I’m absolutely sure that it is those who commit crimes who must be afraid. I stand by my words and can give detailed descriptions of all the rooms and corridors I went through. I can also identify all the people who had something to do with what happened to me on September 7 and 8.”

Maria Kalesnikava also stated that she filed a report with the Investigative Committee and Prosecutor General’s office to start a criminal case regarding kidnapping, unlawful imprisonment, and the threat of murder, extensive bodily harm, or property destruction.
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Women's solidarity action in Minsk. The participants formed a solidarity chain near the Kamarousky market in Minsk.
‘THERE WILL BE NO JOKES ANYMORE”

It is necessary to set up trade unions at all private enterprises by the end of 2020, otherwise, they will be closed down, Alexander Lukashenko said as he met with Chairman of the Federations of Trade Unions of Belarus Mikhail Orda.

“We have agreed that trade unions will be established at all private enterprises by the end of 2020. This issue should be handled by the end of the year,” Lukashenko said.

“Unless private organizations set up trade unions following your request by the end of the year, they will be closed down. You should put forward these proposals. There will be no jokes anymore.”

“We saw what some people did and how they tried to destroy the state and statehood in our country. Well, we will sort things out,” Lukashenko added.
Such a banner of solidarity with doctors is set in Minsk, Angarskaya street's nearby.
“FIRST THEY BROKE LEGS, THEN THEY BASHED HEADS” ● An emergency care doctor told about the protesters who were beaten yesterday.

On November 8, over 1000 Belarusians were detained in Minsk. The media published many videos of people being beaten during the arrest or tortured later at the police precincts: some were standing outside near the wall with their hands raised for 8-11 hours. Emergency care doctors anonymously told “Belsat” about what happened at the Emergency Care Hospital after the protest has been dispersed and people have been arrested.

According to a doctor, most new patients had similar injuries - head trauma, broken legs, arms, ankles.

“Traumatologists helped us put casts on people because there were many comminuted and displaced fractures. People said that the siloviki first hit their legs - broke them to make a person fall, and then bashed their heads,” the doctor said.

The injured people told doctors that they were beaten during the arrest, in the vans, and in the police precincts. Ambulances took people from the precincts. But not everyone got help.

“People on duty said that there are many brutalized people. But the cops only let go of those who couldn’t stand up because of broken legs, who lost consciousness or was vomiting because of head trauma. Sometimes they told doctors to bandage people up and leave them in the precincts. There is no legal basis to let the doctors take someone from the police. They don’t let us take people, don’t let us examine them. They don’t even listen to the doctors.”

All the siloviki wore balaclavas and behaved rudely. “They don’t see the doctors as authority figures anymore. They look at us spitefully, talk rudely,” a doctor noted.

According to another doctor, 15 people were delivered to the Emergency Care Hospital. Three among them were young women, two were about 19-20, the third was barely older. They had head trauma as well as bruises on their breasts and stomachs. “In August, I witnessed the siloviki hitting the women in the stomachs and below, saying that they shouldn’t give birth to scum. This is genocide, there is no other way to call it. And now there are similar injuries.”

The patients’ parents and loved ones came to visit them. Some felt dizzy when they saw what the siloviki did to their children.

“I don’t understand what do these masked ones want to achieve. The parents spoke to me yesterday and said that they will go to the next protest instead of their children and they won’t run away,” a doctor said.

Late at night, people from jail at Akrescina began to trickle into the Emergency Care Hospital. They brought the last one at 5 AM: “This guy had a head trauma so severe, his retina could’ve detached. These guys came without guards, so after getting the treatment they could go home free and happy. This is similar to what happened in August.”

Sergei, another emergency care doctor, said that according to his colleagues from the admissions unit that many patients were brought in on the night of October 9.

“There were many people with serious injuries. Something similar happened in August. Understandably, people with explosive injuries would be taken to the military hospital, that’s their specialty. There were fractures - they hit the hands, broke fingers. Some people had their legs broken. There were concussions, blunt force traumas. I can only compare this to August, there were many injured people too, and we had to constantly examine, put casts, sew wounds,” Sergei said.

November 9, 2020
Source: https://www.the-village.me/village/city/news-city/285733-stop
2024/11/16 11:23:36
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