Alexander Taraikovsky

Alexander Taraikovsky (Belarusian: Аляксандр Тарайкоўскі; 26 March 1986 10 August 2020) was a demonstrator who died in Minsk, Belarus, during the 2020 Belarusian protests in which the police used tear gas, rubber bullets, and stun grenades against peaceful protestors.[1] He was the first victim whose death was officially confirmed.

Alexander Taraikovsky
BornMarch 26, 1986
DiedAugust 10, 2020 (aged 34)
Nationality Belarusian

Death

Taraikovsky died on 10 August 2020, in the capital of Belarus, Minsk, near Pushkinskaya metro station during the 2020 Belarusian protests against President Alexander Lukashenko. Taraikovsky's death was recorded as the first death since the beginning of the 2020 Belarusian protests.[2]

The police reported that Taraikovsky died due to an explosive device detonated in his hand that he intended to throw at the officers. However, demonstrators said that he was shot by the police. [3] A video that was published on 15 August 2020, showed Taraikovsky empty-handed being shot by the police.[4]

On 14 August 2020, TUT.by, an independent Belarusian media outlet, reported that Taraikovsky's death certificate stated massive bleeding from an open wound in the chest as the cause of death.[2]

Calls for Investigation

Rally in memory of Alexander Taraikovsky, Pushkinskaya metro station, Minsk, on 15 August 2020

Taraikovsky's partner, Elena German, was able to visit the morgue and see his body four days after he died. German said that she did not believe in the official version of Taraikovsky death provided by the police. German declared that the only Taraikovsky's injury was to his chest and that his hands and feet were "completely intact." She told the Associated Press that she was sure that he was shot by the police and denied the official version that he died from an explosive device. German stated that the chest wound resembled a seam with a hole sewn up around a black bruise.[1]

German asked the Belarusian Human Rights organization for help to facilitate an independent investigation by the international experts of Taraikovsky's death.[5][6] German stated that she saw no exit wound on Taraikovsky's back. She requested to see the bullet, believing that the bullet was stuck inside Taraikovsky's body, but the police refused her request. This raised more suspicion that Taraikovsky was killed by live ammunition.[7]

After Taraikovsky's death, video footage was published where Taraikovsky is shown standing with his hand by his body, as blood poured from his chest. He collapsed in front of a line of riot officers and remained to lay motionless. Elena German declared that there is new video footage showing Taraikovsky being shot by the police.[8]

Public investigation

On December 21, 2020, the representative of the public initiative "Belarusian People's Tribunal" Igor Makar published the materials of the preliminary investigation. They claim that Aleksandr Taraikovsky was deliberately and cynically killed by an employee of the Special Anti-Terrorist Unit "Almaz" Korovin Nikita Yuryevich(born in 1993), with the complicity of other unidentified employees of this special forces unit.[9]

Funeral and memory

On 11 August 2020, a grassroots memorial appeared on the place of Taraikovsky's death. During the night it was destroyed by the municipal workers but reappeared the next morning. It was destroyed again and reappeared again.

On 13 August, ambassadors of European Union countries, representatives of the US embassy and other countries laid flowers to the memorial. On 15 August, thousands of Belarusians gathered on Pushkin Square, where Taraikovsky died, to pay a tribute to him, lay flowers to the monument, and observe a moment of silence.[3] They chanted "Tribunal” while the cars passing by were beeping in support. Pavel Latushko, director-general of Yanka Kupala National Academic Theatre, musician Lavon Volski, poet Vladimir Neklyaev, singer Max Korzh and Maria Kolesnikova, representative of former presidential candidate Viktor Babariko's headquarters, came to pay tribute to the victim.

Taraikovsky's funeral ceremony was held at the same day and was attended by around 800 people, although only relatives and friends were initially invited. When the coffin with Taraikovsky was taken out of the ceremony hall, people knelt down, clapped, showed a sign of victory and shouted 'Glory to the hero!', 'Long live Belarus!', and then sang Magutny Bozha (Mighty God, a hymn used by the Belarusian opposition). On the same day, Alexander Taraikovsky was buried in the Western cemetery.[10]

On 2 September, an inscription “We will not forget!” on the sidewalk near the makeshift memorial to Taraikovsky was covered with salt which prompted a spontaneous protest act. People started to swipe the salt away and put it into garbage bags disregarding the police. Vadim Zamirovski, a Tut.by photoreporter, was detained for taking pictures of what was going on. Men in civilian clothing approached him from behind, knocked him down, twisted his arms behind his back, and shoved him in a white minibus without license plates and identification signs. Half an hour later they dropped him off in the Sukharevo neighborhood. He was beaten and searched. All the memory cards were taken away. The memorial was covered with salt once more on 4 September, but people removed it again. On the night of 6 September, masked men painted over "We will not forget!".

On 9 September, two Minsk residents were detained when they were trying to restore the inscription near the memorial: a 25-year-old woman, who wrote the first word of the phrase, and a 42-year-old man. Criminal proceedings were initiated against them for hooliganism. Later, they were accused of property damage to the sum of more than 10 thousand Belarusian rubles. Later the charges were reclassified again as malicious hooliganism and "intentional destruction or damage to property committed in a generally dangerous manner or causing damage on a large scale”. As of October 28, both of them remained in custody in the pre-trial detention center in Zhodzina.

On 17 September, Sviatlana Tsikhanouskaya’s Telegram-channel announced that she was preparing "Taraikovsky's List", a separate list of officials and law enforcement officers who had participated and continue to participate in lawless actions.[11]

Reactions

Journalist Vadim Shundalov left the state-run newspaper Sovetskaya Belorussiya – Belarus' Segodnya after Taraikovsky's death, saying that journalists were not allowed to report about a video contradicting the official police version of Taraikovsky death.[12]

On 16 August 2020, then-Interior Minister Yury Karayeu renounced the initial official version, acknowledging Taraikovsky might have been killed by a rubber bullet.

On 19 November 2020, Jim Gilmore, United States Ambassador to the Organization for Security and Cooperation in Europe, spoke on a three-month suspension of the investigation into the death of Alexander Taraikovsky that it is another sign of “the impunity with which Belarusian security forces pursue their violent crackdown on peaceful protesters.”[13]

On 26 November 2020, the European Parliament, in its resolution adopted by an absolute majority of MPs, called for a "prompt, thorough, impartial, and independent investigation" of the killings during protests in Belarus, including Alexander Taraikovsky.[14]

Mass culture

Documentary footage of Taraikovsky's murder by law enforcement officers was used in the "Silence of the Lambs" video by Russian band Nogu Svelo![15]

The play Insulted. Belarus(sia) (2020) by Andrei Kureichik features the prototypes of Alexander Lukashenko and his youngest son Nikolai, Svetlana Tikhonovskaya, Alexander Taraikovsky, Maria Kolesnikova, and other real-life personalities.[16]

See also

References

  1. admin (August 16, 2020). "Protests in Belarus: Alexander Taraikovsky's partner says new footage shows he was shot and killed by police". FR 24 News. Retrieved 2020-09-05.
  2. "Russian State News Falsely Claims Belarus Protester 'Killed Himself'". Polygraph. 17 August 2020. Retrieved 25 August 2020.
  3. "People of Minsk bid farewell to protester killed in Belarus unrest". Euronews. 15 August 2020. Retrieved 25 August 2020.
  4. "Опубликовано видео, как в Минске погиб Александр Тарайковский. У него ничего не было в руках — МВД утверждало, что он бросал бомбу". www.meduza.io. Retrieved 15 August 2020.
  5. "'Shot right in the chest': partner denies Belarus protester died from own bomb". The Guardian. Associated Press. 16 August 2020. Retrieved 25 August 2020.
  6. Karmanau, Yuras (15 August 2020). "Partner of dead Belarus protester believes police shot him". ABC News. Associated Press. Retrieved 25 August 2020.
  7. "Partner of man killed during Belarus protests demands independent probe". Express and Star. 17 August 2020. Retrieved 25 August 2020.
  8. Heffer, Greg (16 August 2020). "Belarus protests: Alexander Taraikovsky's partner says new footage shows he was shot by police". Sky News. Retrieved 25 August 2020.
  9. "Belarusian People's Tribunal". The Taraikovsky case. Report on the results of the preliminary investigation.
  10. "У Менску разьвіталіся з загінулым падчас пратэстаў Аляксандрам Тарайкоўскім". Радые Свабода. 15 August 2020. Retrieved 15 November 2020.
  11. "Daily protests and repressions, international reaction, Coordination Council – Belarus Civil Society Digest". Belarus Digest. 21 September 2020. Retrieved 15 November 2020.
  12. "'It was just lies, lies, lies': Belarusian journalists recount life in a state-run news company". Euronews. 23 August 2020. Retrieved 25 August 2020.
  13. "On Human Rights Violations in Belarus". United States Mission to the Organization for Security and Cooperation in Europe. 2020-11-19. Archived from the original on 2020-11-26. Retrieved 2020-11-26.
  14. "Санкции, международное расследование преступлений. Европарламент принял новую резолюцию по Беларуси" (in Russian). TUT.BY. 2020-11-26. Archived from the original on 2020-11-26. Retrieved 2020-11-26.
  15. "Ногу Свело! – Молчание Ягнят". Ногу Свело!. 8 October 2020. Retrieved 15 November 2020.
  16. "Insulted. Belarus(sia) by Andrei Kureichik". HowlRound Theatre Commons. Retrieved 2021-01-30.
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