Out of jail
January 30, 2011The second of five imprisoned opposition candidates in Belarus was released on Saturday, to be placed under house arrest, the country's KGB security service said in a statement.
Vladimir Neklyayev was one of five presidential candidates charged with having organized mass protests in December after President Alexander Lukashenko was declared the winner of an election.
The first candidate to be released, at the beginning of January, was Vitaly Rymashevsky.
In addition to the release of 64-year-old Neklyayev, the KGB also announced that journalist Irina Khalip, the wife of another imprisoned candidate, was being transferred from jail.
"Neklyayev and Khalip were placed under house arrest," the televised statement said. It added that four other opposition figures who had participated in rallies had also been freed, with the releases being granted on grounds of good behavior.
Decision on travel ban
The announcement comes ahead of a meeting of EU foreign ministers on Monday. It is expected that visa bans against Belarus, which were suspended in 2008, will be re-imposed at the talks.
Neklyayev was severely beaten as he led a protest march in the Belarusian capital, Minsk, on December 19, and was transferred to jail while he recovered in hospital.
Some 1,000 people were arrested in a crackdown on the opposition after the elections were declared undemocratic by international observers.
The European Union has demanded that Lukashenko, sometimes described as Europe's last dictator, release all anti-government activists being held in custody.
Author: Richard Connor (AFP, AP, dpa)
Editor: Nicole Goebel