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Mikola Statkevich

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This is an old revision of this page, as edited by Luckas-bot (talk | contribs) at 10:28, 29 December 2010 (r2.5.2) (robot Adding: be:Мікалай Віктаравіч Статкевіч). The present address (URL) is a permanent link to this revision, which may differ significantly from the current revision.

Mikola Statkevich (Template:Lang-be, Template:Lang-ru, born August 12, 1956) is a Belarusian politician and presidential candidate at the 2010 election.

Mikola Statkevich was born in the Slutsk raion into a family of school teachers. He is a descendant of the Statkewicz noble family.

Statkevich graduated from a military engineering school in Minsk and served in the Soviet antiaircraft defense in the Arctic region.

In the early 1990s Statkevich was one of the leaders of the Belarusian Militarymen Association, a pro-independence union of Soviet officers from Belarus[1]. In 1991 Statkevich has left the Communist Party of the USSR as a protest against a brutal Soviet military action against the democratic pro-independence opposition in the Lithuanian SSR.

In 1993 Statkevich was actively protesting against Belarus joining a collective defence treaty with Azerbaijan and Armenia that were at war at a time, in order to prevent Belarusian soldiers serving in military conflicts outside the country. For this Statkevich has been dismissed from the army shortly before the scheduled presentation of his Doctor of Science dissertation.

He then became one of the leaders of the Belarusian Social Democratic Party (People's Assembly), including the party's chairman since 1995[2].

In 2005 Statkevich was sentenced to three years of labour for organising mass protests against the 2004 referendum in Belarus that has lifted the constitutional limit on presidential terms and allowed president Aliaksandr Lukashenka to again participate in presidential elections. Amnesty International has declared Mikola Statkevich Prisoner of conscience. He was then set free in 2007 following an amnesty.

In 2010 Mikola Statkevich is one of many democratic candidates at the presidential election

References