Authorities put BAJ deputy chairman Aleh Aheyeu on interstate wanted list
The search database does not indicate which legal article Belarusian and Russian authorities are using to prosecute Aleh Aheyeu, the deputy chairman of the Belarusian Association of Journalists (BAJ). Earlier, another BAJ deputy chairman, Barys Haretski, was also added to a wanted list.

BAJ deputy chairman Aleh Ageyeu. Photo: BAJ
In a comment to BAJ’s monitoring service, Aleh Aheyeu suggested that Belarusian authorities likely requested Interpol (the International Criminal Police Organization) to put him on a wanted list:
“Each country has the authority to initiate criminal prosecution for crimes committed within its territory. If a suspect leaves the country and law enforcement knows their new location, they can either send a specific request to the country where the person is believed to be or put them on an international wanted list.
There are different procedures for this, most commonly through Interpol. Any country that is part of Interpol can conduct this crime detection within its borders and follow its national procedures. So, if law enforcement agencies have placed a person on an international wanted list, each Interpol member country may choose to proceed with their detection based on its own national procedures.”
Russia includes a large number of Belarusians in its wanted list specifically because they have been declared internationally wanted by Belarusian authorities.
According to the legal expert, the presence of Aheyeu’s personal data in the Russian wanted database indicates that a criminal case has been opened against him in Belarus.
“However, I have not personally received any notifications regarding this. It’s unlikely that I have been listed as a missing person—that’s certainly not my case,” Aheyeu said with irony.
“I’m not the first Belarusian on that list. Two years ago, the Belarusian Association of Journalists was designated an extremist organization. The authorities’ decision included the names of those whom the head of Belarus’s KGB considered members of this organization. This alone is enough to justify opening a criminal case against the deputy chairman of the association, and that’s likely what happened. However, they may have other ‘concerns’ about me—I wouldn’t rule that out,” Aheyeu added.
“In Belarus today, many actions can be criminalized and considered offenses, even though they do not align with any international standards. I have certainly committed no crimes—I am a lawyer and know my rights. But in Belarus today, the peaceful exercise of rights is largely prohibited. As a result, they are attempting to criminally prosecute me for nonviolent actions, which violates international law.
That is why most Interpol member countries do not enforce or respond to Belarus’s politically motivated prosecutions. Again, I’m not the first person on this list—there are already thousands of Belarusians whom the authorities have put on it.”
The editor-in-chief of Reform.news and Free Media Award laureate Fiodar Pauluchenka has also been placed on a wanted list.
