Expulsion of counsel Pavel Sapelka from the Minsk City Bar Association: opinions of human rights defenders
On 19 December Ales Lukashou, a student of
the physical faculty of the Belarusian State University, went to the
Kastrychnitskaya Square in the same column with the presidential candidate Uladzimir
Niakliayeu and witnessed his beating.
He was summoned to the police twice as a participant of the demonstration. The
Dean claimed he would not expel him for politics, but they found another reason
- failure at the examination session. Ales passed three exams out of five, but
he was failed at the last two. He tried to take these exams once again, with
the commission, but in vain.
Aliaksandr Lukashou has already received an invitation to participate in Kastus
Kalinouski program in Poland.
The youngster wants to change his profession to another one - journalism, Nasha
Niva informs.
Expulsion of counsel Pavel Sapelka from the Minsk City Bar Association:
opinions of human rights defenders
Ales Bialiatski, Chair of the Human
Rights Center
Viasna:
'It is an unprecedented case of pressurization of counsels. I think that
reprisals are used against independent lawyers on any grounds. Actually, an end
is put to the independent advocacy by this. The case of Pavel Sapelka is a
clear signal to all other counsels who take part in the case concerning the
events of 19 December and other politically motivated cases, and in any cases
in general. It is a warning to all counsels of the country.
Before this, it was said that we had no independent judiciary system. Since
this day, we have no independent bar either, which grossly violates the right
of all citizens to independent defense at court. Those who will try to honestly
defend the accused, whose interests differ from the interests of the state
authorities, will become victims of repressions.
Pavel Sapelka is actually deprived of the right to work in Belarus: it will be extremely
difficult for him to find a job with such a “black mark”, though he is a
high-skilled lawyer and was a member of the Presidium of the Minsk City Bar
Association.
All trials concerning the events of 19 December become a complete fiction since
then. They turn into a tragic show organized by the authorities to lynch their
opponents. We express our categorical protest against it and urge all people
who are interested in the independent defense of citizens during the
investigation and the trials to do everything possible to improve the situation
and get the lawyer reinstated at the place of work.
Valiantsin Stefanovich, Deputy Chair of the Human Rights
Center Viasna:
In the evening of 3 March we learned about the expulsion of counsel Sapelka
from the Minsk City Bar Association. Actually, it means that he has been
deprived of the right to deal with advocacy. Irrespective of which formal legal
grounds are used to cover it, I think that the reasons are evident. Lawyer
Pavel Sapelka is well-known for his honesty and adherence to principles. He
participated in cases which were inconvenient for the authorities, politically
motivated cases, defended opponents of the present regime. His deprivation of
the right to continue his work is a continuation of the pressurization of counsels
we have observed, by which I also mean the first attempt to expel Mr. Sapelka
from the bar association (when the Ministry of Justice submitted its first
prescription to the bar association, but the latter didn't agree to do it) and
the annulment of licenses to four counsels. All these events are interrelated.
It is very annoying that Pavel Sapelka was expelled by members of the bar
association, that organs of counsels’ self government started dancing to the
piping of the KGB and the Ministry of Justice. The whole society is deprived of
defense by professional and honest lawyers as a result.”
Hary Pahaniaila, Chair of the legal commission of the Belarusian Helsinki Committee
“I have just learned about the expulsion of Pavel Sapelka from the bar
association and still don't know the concrete reasons for it. However, the
expulsion coincided with the pressurization of lawyers in general. It is
connected with the participation of members of the Minsk City Bar Association
in the case concerning the events of 19 December 2010 in Minsk. They try to professionally defend the
people who became victims of the regime.
Pavel Sapelka has participated in many politically motivated cases. Another
campaign on persecution of opponents has been launched in Belarus these
days, and its scope reached lawyers. The authorities are enraged when counsels
openly state that their clients are innocent and ask the court to justify them.
It is bad that Pavel Sapelka was deprived of the right to work by a decision of
the bar association. Of course, the bar association unites different lawyers,
and there can be good and bad people among them, but now their colleague is
redundant. I think that human rights defenders must do everything possible to
restore his right to work so that he would be able to continue implementing his
professional duty – to defend citizens.'
Aleh Hulak, Chair of the Belarusian Helsinki Committee
“It is a very sad event which witnesses the ongoing legal
boundlessness in the country. All this is evidently connected to the criminal
case concerning the events of 19 December. As it can be seen from the past
trials on the case, our brave secret services didn't manage to collect evidence
(and it would be strange to expect it from them – remember how they had
investigated the previous celebrated cases, such as the explosion in the night
of 3-4 July 2008 in
Minsk). These
people evidently forgot how to work within the legal boundaries. Having
received an order for a certain scenario of events and certain results, they
need to find the guilty, to create the semblance of a legal process, but there
is no evidence. Judges are easier to deal with – because they aren't chosen by
clients, unlike lawyers – the necessary judge can be always appointed. Counsels,
on the contrary, remained a small island of freedom, especially after the Minsk counsels elected
their own administration. Now we see the struggle against this island of
freedom with all existent means, unlawful means. Maybe, it is the last time the
lawyers are put before such serious challenge – whether they will prove being
able to oppose what somebody wants to do to them or not.
The task of human rights defenders in such cases is to talk about the problem,
to disclose the situation. We can make appeals, address the international
community (first of all the professional community), as the contemporary standards
raise the corporative solidarity to a very high level all over the world. It is
not without reason that the UN has a special rapporteur on the independence of
judges and lawyers.
Trying to enable all these mechanisms, we can only help, but no solve the
problem – it is necessary for the lawyer community to take some effort as
well.'