Belarusians fleeing repression at home say they face new threats and intimidation abroad
More than a half-million Belarusians have fled their country since 2020 as the authoritarian government cracked down its critics
TALLINN, Estonia (AP) — More than a half-million Belarusians have fled their country in the past four years as the authoritarian government launched a harsh crackdown on its political opponents. Some of them, however, are discovering that they can't escape intimidation and threats in their new lives abroad.
Dziana Maiseyenka, 28, was detained without warning while crossing the border from Armenia to Georgia, where she had taken refuge from Belarus a year ago to escape what she called “the nightmare at home.”
Authorities in Minsk, she was told, had issued an international arrest warrant against her on charges of “organizing mass unrest.”
She knows what a return to Belarus will mean: Her father was imprisoned for nearly three years on similar charges. When he was released last year, he was promptly arrested again.