Ales Bialiatski, a Nobel Peace Prize laureate and founder of the human rights group
Viasna, was freed in a negotiated exchange that released 123 political prisoners from
Belarus in return for an easing of
USA sanctions on the country’s potash sector. The deal, brokered by
Alexander Lukashenko through an envoy linked to
Donald Trump, also secured the freedom of opposition figure
Maria Kolesnikova, Japanese citizen
Masatoshi Nakanishi and others, while
Russia and human rights advocates criticized the arrangement and what they saw as passivity from the EU. Speaking from exile in
Lithuania after describing harsh conditions in Penal Colony No. 9, including solitary confinement and constant humiliations, Bialiatski said his Nobel Peace Prize partly shielded him from the worst abuses, vowed to continue his work for
Viasna, urged the EU and
USA to apply firm pressure and credible negotiations to end repression, and warned that about 1,110 political prisoners, including colleagues
Marfa Rabkova and
Valiantsin Stefanovich, remain jailed as Minsk seeks cautious rapprochement with the West.