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    HomeWorldAmericaReleased Belarus prisoners have no regrets over their actions

    Released Belarus prisoners have no regrets over their actions

    Dec 14 (Reuters) - Two prominent Belarusian ​opposition leaders released by Belarusian authorities in a deal brokered by the U.S. said on Sunday they had no regrets over the actions that led to their incarceration.

    Maria Kalesnikava, 43, was one of ⁠the leaders of mass protests in 2020 accusing President Alexander Lukashenko of rigging his re-election for a sixth term. Lukashenko crushed the protests through mass police action.

    Kalesnikava, quoted by Belarusian opposition news outlet Nasha ‍Niva, was one of a group of released prisoners to address journalists at an undisclosed location in Ukraine a day ​after their release. A total of 123 prisoners were freed, with 114 taken to Ukraine and nine to Lithuania.

    "No, I regret nothing. I believe that there are times during which certain questions are raised, difficult questions ​and you have to make difficult choices," Nasha Niva quoted her as saying in the news conference.

    "It was easy to make that difficult choice because I was and remain certain that I supported the right idea ... I am not alone. There are many of us."

    Kalesnikava, a musician, said she would now devote time to music, art, theatre, travel and "communication with people I love and care deeply ‌about".

    Seized in 2020 and driven to the Ukrainian border, she tore up her passport to prevent ‌being deported - and was later jailed for 11 years on charges including conspiracy to seize power.

    Viktar Babaryka, 62, a former banker who was ​jailed after trying to run against Lukashenko, also reaffirmed his principles.

    "All my life, I have done what I believed to be right and necessary. In 2020, I did, we did, what we could. You ‌can blame yourself only if you failed to complete something," Nasha Niva quoted him as saying. 

    "So no regrets ⁠over what I did ... We did not lose. We won. We won no prizes ‌but we turned out to be stronger."

    Babaryka would not ​rule out a return to public life.

    "If Belarus needs me, I will try to do something for Belarus," he told reporters. If it is my family that needs me, next year is my pension year."

    Babaryka ⁠said his son Eduard was among ⁠those who remain political prisoners in Belarus. The Viasna rights group estimates that group numbered 1,227 before ​Saturday's prisoner release.

    The release was negotiated by John Coale, an envoy for U.S. President Donald Trump, with Minsk receiving an offer of relief from ‌sanctions.

    (Reporting by Ron Popeski; Editing by Paul Simao)

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