[ad_1]
“We kindly invite you to join us,” Lukashenko replied. The video was published by the Belarus 1 television channel, according to Dožd.
“There is such a nuance. These people have been prosecuted in Donbass. I reminded President Vladimir Putin about this and said yes [apsiskelbusios respublikos] If you have any questions, we kindly invite you to ask those questions. Because they killed people there, in Donbass, and [R. Pratasevičius] on the plane he shouted that he was facing the death penalty, and our journalists explained that our article does not provide for the death penalty, but 15 years in prison. He knew what he was talking about. He realized that he could be charged there in southeastern Ukraine, which is a completely different situation, “Lukashenko said in a meeting with the government.
The Lugansk People’s Republic Prosecutor General’s Office said it was investigating “the possible involvement of R. Pratasevičius in military operations in eastern Ukraine in the Azov Battalion.” The day before, the authority announced that it had found that “R. Pratasevic was involved in the shooting against peaceful residents of Donbass and the destruction of civil infrastructure “, and asked Belarus for an investigation. He was prosecuted in a self-proclaimed republic. Pratasevičius” committed extremely serious crimes “using” heavy weapons “, including cannons, mortars and anti-aircraft weapons, according to the Lugansk People’s Republic Prosecutor General’s Office.
According to R. Protasevičius’s father, his son worked as a journalist in Donbass.
Andrijus Bileckis, former commander of the Azov Battalion, confirmed that R. Pratasevičius worked as a journalist in Donbas. “Yes, Raman fought against the occupation of Ukraine together with Azov and other military units. He was with us in Shirokin, where he wounded him. However, his weapon as a journalist was not a machine gun, but a word,” emphasized A. Bileckis.
Delfi recalls that the Belarusian state channel ONT published new polls on Tuesday night of the former editor in chief of the Telegram channel Nexta, Raman Pratasevich.
In a 13-second video, R. Pratasevičius claims to have been harassed.
“It just came to our knowledge then. Because I didn’t say that anywhere, and as soon as I said that, I immediately found myself in Minsk. Right away,” says R. Pratasevičius in the video. The specific words he speaks about are not specified. R. Pratasevičius in the video.
The ONT announces that the “investigation”, which will show the footage of the interview with the journalist, will be broadcast on the night of June 2.
May 23 A Ryanair passenger plane flying from Athens to Vilnius forcibly landed in Minsk, where a Belarusian opposition activist wanted by the Lukashenko regime was arrested. A Ryanair plane, while in Belarusian airspace and approaching the Lithuanian border, suddenly turned towards Minsk and landed there. The company said the liner had landed when Belarusian air dispatchers reported a possible security threat on the plane.
This information was not confirmed during the inspection of the aircraft. The Belarusian opposition says the plane was forcibly landed to arrest R. Pratasevičius, one of the founders of the Nexta information channel.
Along with him, his friend, a Russian citizen and law student at the European Humanities University (EHU) in Vilnius, Sofia Sapega, was arrested in Minsk. Lukashenko’s press service said on his Telegram that he had ordered the flight to be directed and the passenger plane to be accompanied by a MiG-29 fighter. The European Union and the United States have condemned the forced landing of the liner in Minsk and demanded the release of Pratasevičius.
Ryanair CEO Michael O’Leary called the incident a “state sponsored kidnapping.”
“It seems that the objective of the agents was to remove the journalist and his traveling companion. We think about the airport [iš lėktuvo] several KGB (Belarusian State Security Committee) agents also disembarked, “he said. R. Pratasevičius, who started working as an internet activist as a teenager, left Belarus in 2019, when he started working for the influential program of correspondence Telegram, Nexta, which supports the opposition.
Subsequently, R. Pratasevičius became a channel that currently has more than 1.2 million. subscriber, editor-in-chief. The channel has been instrumental in mobilizing protesters during the unprecedented demonstrations that have rocked Belarus since last August’s controversial presidential election. Lukashenko, who has led Belarus since 1994, has won a sixth term. The opposition and western democracies view the elections as rigged.
It is strictly forbidden to use the information published by DELFI on other websites, in the media or elsewhere, or to distribute our material in any way without consent, and if consent has been obtained, it is necessary to cite DELFI as the source.
[ad_2]