bingojili.jili 646 ph register.jili no minimum deposit.slotsph

Advertisement
X

Russia-Ukraine War Forces 'Rebel' Belarusian Olympian Aliaksandra Herasimenia To Flee

Aliaksandra Herasimenia, a strong critic of?Belarusian President Alexander Lukashenko, has escaped to Poland after Russia's War On Ukraine.

She has faced it all. After winning multiple Olympic medals for Belarus, Aliaksandra Herasimenia was accused of damaging?the country's reputation, and the swimmer was forced to live?in exile in Ukraine to avoid political persecution. (More Sports News)

Herasimenia even sold?her 2012 World Championship gold medal in 2021 to help?"political prisoners". But the ordeal is not over for the 36-year-old and her family. She has been exiled again!

Aliaksandra Herasimenia, a three-time Olympic medallist, was again forced to flee Ukraine, this time to save her family from the onrushing Russian army in Kyiv. She is now in Warsaw with her husband, Olympic swimmer Yauhen?Tsurkin, their three-and-half years daughter and mother.?

Herasimenia, a freestyle swimmer, won silver medals in 50 and 100-metre at 2012 London Olympics and finished with a 50m bronze in Rio 2016. She has won multiple world championship and European medals, including gold in 2011 Shanghai world aquatics.??

"Of course I had to make something up because how do you explain to a child that war has started?" Reuters reported?Herasimenia talking about the ordeal.

Last year, the Belarusian government opened criminal proceedings against Aliaksandra Herasimenia for criticising the Belarusian?government led by President Alexander Lukashenko.

Herasimenia?is also a co-founder of the Belarusian Sport Solidarity?Foundation (BSSF).?It was founded in 2020. The BSSF supports athletes who have suffered at the hands of the Belarussian government.

Notable among them is Krystsina Tsimanouskaya, who refused to return to Minsk from the Tokyo Olympics. The 25-year-old sprinter eventually got a humanitarian visa to stay in Poland, where?Aliaksandra?Herasimenia is now seeking refuge.

Alexander Lukashenko, a close ally of Russian President Vladimir Putin,?is the longest-serving European president. His election for the?sixth term in 2020 led to the largest anti-government protests?in the history of Belarus with many accusing the 67-year-old of rigging the vote.

"A year and a half ago, we were the ones who were fighting for our rights, our freedom," added Herasimenia. "We called on the Europeans, Americans and everyone in Ukraine for?help. We warned that Lukashenko was very dangerous."

Putin used Belarus, formerly a part of the Soviet Union, as a staging ground for Russian troops in the build-up to the invasion of Ukraine. Belarus became an independent country in 1991.

Advertisement

Lukashenko has been the president of Belarus since the enactment of the new constitution in 1994. The country became independent in 1991.

"It's as if this never happened... No difference is being made between those who support Lukashenko and those who fought?against him," Herasimenia said about the plight of ordinary?citizens.

In the wake of a crackdown against those who protested the fraudulent re-election of Lukashenko, many fled Belarus including elite athletes like?Aliaksandra?Herasimenia.

"We've been running for a long time," said Herasimenia, whose family waited for nearly a day and a half at Ukraine's border to enter Poland.

(With agency inputs)

Show comments
SC