Belarusian authorities arrested and sentenced some 1,200 dissidents accused of ‘extremism’ and other crimes against the regime across the country in recent months, a human rights organization reported.
Those arrested are then sentenced through an ‘administrative process’. The practice, carried over from the Soviet era, allows for sentences to be meted out by executive bodies, i.e. administration, without the involvement of the court, essentially amounting to extrajudicial punishment.❗️Mass arrests and detentions are taking place in the Hrodna region, initiated by the KGB @viasna96
— Pavel Latushka (@PavelLatushka) November 14, 2024
The political purge continues, a week earlier, arrests occurred across №Belarus: in Smarhon, at least 40 people; in Khoiniki - around 20; in Slonim - at least 10; in Yelizava -… pic.twitter.com/FEFMY0ERPr
What the Belarusian regime considers extremism may include the sharing or even accessing of content by independent media on the Internet and social media channels, that have been proscribed by the Aleksandr Lukashenko’s regime. These include contents such outlets as Belsat, the Belarusian-language subsidiary of Poland’s public broadcaster TVP, or the Polish Radio, as well as social media posts critical of the authorities.
Other ‘extremist content’ includes national symbols other than the official, Soviet-inspired ones, for example, the Pahonia coat of arms or the white-red-white flag, and even the combination of colors itself.

Pavel Latushka, a former culture minister under Lukashenko, and currently the head of the National Anti-Crisis Management and deputy prime minister in Sviatlana Tsikhanouskaya’s government in exile, appealed to Western governments and institutions to react to this most recent wave of political repressions.
“In every region of Belarus activists, relatives of political prisoners, volunteers & people who have traveled abroad since 2020 are being subjected to particularly harsh repression,” Latushka wrote in a post on X on Friday. “The dictator must understand that his ‘preparation’ for reappointment will not go unnoticed, that politically motivated persecutions will not go unpunished, and the Belarusian people must know they are not left alone to face Lukashenko’s repressive machine.”
I appeal to our partners & friends: @PolandMFA @LithuaniaMFA @Latvian_MFA @MFAestonia @SweMFA @CzechMFA @GermanyDiplo @vonderleyen @eu_eeas @JosepBorrellF to condemn the unjust mass detentions that have been taking place across Belarus over the past 2 weeks.
— Pavel Latushka (@PavelLatushka) November 15, 2024
In every region of… pic.twitter.com/o12QKxun67
Getting ready for ‘elections’
The previous elections held in 2020 resulted in a wave of protests the regime brutally cracked down upon.
The repressions are also connected to the ongoing Russian invasion of Ukraine, during the initial weeks of which Belarusian territory was used as a staging ground for a Russian invasion force that launched an offensive toward Ukraine’s capital of Kyiv.
Even before the invasion, Belarus also saw constant military drills involving Russian armed forces being carried out on its territory. The large-scale military exercises Zapad, which have been organized jointly with Russian forces on Belarusian territory every four years, are scheduled to take place in the first half of next year from the usual autumn date.
Back in late October, Latushka told the Polish Forsal business news outlet that “Russia’s ambassador to Minsk, Boris Gryzlov, said that if there will be protests in Belarus, they [Russia] are ready to support their ally. This means that Russia said it is ready to send the army to suppress protests during the rigged elections.”
Political prisoners
The regime has recently released 31 political prisoners , including some individuals who are ill, but the so-called ‘humanitarian list’ is much longer. Held in deliberately poor conditions, some of the prisoners die in detention, often under suspicious circumstances.
Radio Svoboda, a subsidiary of Radio Free Europe/Radio Liberty, recently reported, on the death of 22-year-old Dzmitry Shlethauer , who was sentenced to 12 years for “espionage” and “facilitating extremist activities”. His family told Radio Svoboda that they were informed Shlethauer, who prior to the arrest was in good health, died of “mechanical asphyxiation,” orphaning a child born after he was detained.