Mahiliou: repressed for Belarusian language applies to court
Andrei Padaliak from Mahiliou, fined
allegedly for swearing, says the real reason for the trial was speaking
Belarusian.
He filed an appeal to the Mahiliou
Region Court on 5 December, BelaPAN reports.
Padaliak says he was standing at a bus stop in the evening of 16 November
talking to his wife on his cell phone in Belarusian. “That was the reason why
policemen detained me. They later jeered at me when I refused to undergo
fingerprinting,” Padolski wrote in the appeal.
On 24 November Stanislau Shandarovich, a judge of the Leninski district court
of Mahiliou, fined Padaliak 525,000 rubles for violating article 17.1 of the
Code of Administrative Offenses. The young man was accused of being drunk and
swearing in public. Police say he was shouting, which attracted attention of
passers-by, and did not react to remarks.
Andrei Padaliak says the judge did not take into account that evidence by
policemen differ from a police report on an administrative offense.
“Witnesses said I began to shout and swear after policemen had approached me.
But the police report reads I was swearing and that’s why police officers came
to me,” Padaliak says.
According to him, the judge ignored the fact that policemen tried to
fingerprint him forcefully, jeered at him, beat and put his head into a toilet
bowl.
Padaliak is convinced the judge tries to hide hatred of police officers to the
Belarusian language. In fact, policemen equated speaking in Belarusian to
swearing, he thinks.
The man demands to overturn the verdict of the Leninski district court of
Mahiliou.