Source: Human Rights Watch
Dispatches: Driven Out of Belarus – for ‘Speeding’
Tanya Lokshina
Kicked out of Belarus
for allegedly “speeding”? This is what’s happening to prominent human
rights lawyer Elena Tonkacheva. It seems that people who live in
authoritarian countries and work on human rights had better not drive.
Tonkacheva, 44, is a Russian national who has been living in Belarus for
30 years. Her family and life are there. She moved to Minsk with her
parents in 1985, still under the Soviets, received her education, and
started practicing as a lawyer there. More than a decade ago she created
the Legal Transformation Center, an independent group of legal experts
and rights champions who work on human rights education and provide
human rights analysis of legislative initiatives. Known as Belarus’s top
human rights lawyer, Tonkacheva has devoted the last 15 years to this
work.
Several weeks ago, police notified Tonkacheva that her residence permit,
valid until 2017, would be annulled because of speed limit violations.
Notwithstanding the minor nature of the alleged offense, and that 7,000
people signed a petition asking the authorities to reconsider, yesterday
police told Tonkacheva that she had 30 days to leave Belarus and could
not return to the country for another three years. According to
Tonkacheva, the police read her the expulsion order, refusing to give
her a copy. The order apparently said that under Belarusian law “a car
represents a particularly dangerous means of transportation” and while
operating that “particularly dangerous means of transportation” over the
speed limit she “could have put citizens in danger and even caused
their death.”
Given the Belarusian government’s longstanding Soviet-style practice of suppressing dissent,
there is little reason to doubt this is a convenient pretext to silence
one of its most vocal critics and effectively throw her life into
chaos.
Tonkacheva told me she will appeal the expulsion order, but there was
little optimism in her voice. When we spoke today, we recalled a song
from an immensely popular Soviet film, which conveys the message that
you’re better off not having certain things because they can lead to
trouble. “Not having a husband means you won’t have to fight with him” –
and so on. We could add a line to the song: If you work on human rights
in Belarus, you’re apparently better off not having a car.
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