We are talking about the removal of children from the occupied Ukrainian territories. First they go to Russia, and then some end up in Belarus. Based on public figures, not everyone returns home. BIC investigates which Belarusians have been involved in the illegal transfer of Ukrainian children.
"My house is ruined." "It’s bad there.” "They shoot a lot." "It gets scary from time to time."
These are the words of children from an orphanage destroyed by Russian troops in the coal mining city of Horlivka in Donetsk region. The quotes were provided by the state-run publication "Belarus Today" in an April story on the arrival of 350 schoolchildren from the occupied Ukrainian territories.
In Belarus, the children were asked to remember "their childhood the way it should be: calm, exciting, and full of joy". They were sent to the Dubrava camp, owned by the giant fertilizer company Belaruskali.
In mid-July, the Telegraph wrote an article about Dubrava and camps at the Ostroshitsky Gorodok sanitarium, the Zubrenok national children's educational and health center in the Minsk region, and the Golden Sands sanitarium in the Gomel Region. According to the article, over 2,000 children from Ukraine have arrived at those camps since September 2022.
It was possible to bring more than a thousand Ukrainian schoolchildren to Belarus in April-May of this year "thanks to the instructions of Aleksandr Lukashenko," Belarus Today stated. For the involvement of the "regime in the illegal movement of children," European Parliament deputies demand that an international arrest warrant be issued for him. It is similar to a warrant issued by the International Criminal Court in The Hague for Putin.
Other Belarusians, including those from Lukashenko's entourage and family, may also be implicated. Some of them were identified by BIC using photographs from events with the evacuated children.
Under the guise of help
December 2022. Christmas Eve the Adler-Minsk train arrived at the capital's railway station. Children from occupied Horlivka were aboard. They were met by members of the pro-government Russian Night Wolves biker club, along with volunteers and Paralympian Aliaksei Talai, founder of a charitable foundation.
In March, Talai asked the Standing Committee of the Union State (of Belarus and Russia) to help organize the arrival of children from the Donetsk and Luhansk regions. This is written in a document obtained by BIC thanks to Cyber Partisans. The letter was signed by Dmitry Mezentsev, secretary of the Union State.