Former Belarus 'hit squad member' to face trial in Switzerland

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An alleged former member of a Belarusian elite police unit will stand trial in Switzerland next month, accused of participating in the disappearances of three political opposition members, a Swiss NGO said Wednesday.

Yury Garavsky, a "former member of President Alexander Lukashenko's SOBR unit, will stand before a criminal court in St. Gallen, Switzerland on 19-20 September", said the TRIAL International organisation, which fights against impunity for war crimes.

Regional authorities in the northeastern Swiss canton of St. Gallen confirmed to AFP that Garavsky's trial would begin on September 19, but have not commented on his whereabouts or other details about the case.

According to TRIAL, he is not currently in custody.

The NGO said Garavsky stands accused of having participated in the enforced disappearances of three major political opponents of Lukashenko in 1999: former interior minister Yury Zakharenko, along with former deputy prime minister Viktor Gonchar and his close friend, the businessman Anatoly Krasovsky.

Zakharenko vanished in May 1999. Then in September that year, Gonchar and Krasovsky were abducted.

- 'Historic' -

In 2019, Garavsky gave sensational testimony to the German broadcaster Deutsche Welle, maintaining he had been part of the Belarusian interior ministry's SOBR special forces team, which he said had executed the three men.

In 2021, after confirming that Garavsky had settled in St. Gallen, TRIAL, along with the International Federation for Human Rights (FIDH) and Belarusian rights group Viasna filed a criminal complaint with the regional prosecutor.

Families of the victims filed a separate complaint on the same day.

In a statement, TRIAL described the case as "historic".

It marks the first time a Belarusian national will stand trial for enforced disappearance on the basis of so-called universal jurisdiction, which allows the prosecution of certain grave crimes, regardless of where they took place.

It will also mark the first time the alleged offence has been tried in Switzerland, the statement said.

"With this first-ever prosecution of an alleged member of Lukashenko's hit squad, we are sending a strong signal," Viasna lawyer Pavel Sapelko said in the statement.

"Step by step, we are making impunity impossible for international criminals."

Viasna is a leading NGO targeted by the Lukashenko regime. The group's founder, Nobel peace prize winner Ales Bialiatski, is jailed in Belarus.

"This case marks a decisive step forward in the fight against impunity for the crimes committed in Belarus," Severin Walz, a lawyer representing the victims' relatives, said in the statement.

"My clients' greatest hope is to obtain certainty about the fate of their fathers through a judgement delivered by a due judicial proceeding."

Ilya Nuzov, who heads FIDH's Eastern Europe and Central Asia desk, said the trial could have even broader significance.

It "might not only secure a conviction for one of the perpetrators of these heinous crimes," he said in the statement.

"It could also establish facts which could later be used to go after those who had ordered... the crime, including Lukashenko himself."