Major release: 250 political prisoners freed in Belarus, including key journalists
Following the March 19 visit to Minsk by John Coale, U.S. presidential envoy, Belarusian authorities announced the release of 250 political prisoners. Of these, 15 people were taken to Lithuania the same day, while 235 remain in Belarus. Information about the release of the latter is still being confirmed.

First photo of political prisoners after release. Belarus-Lithuania border, March 19, 2026. Photo: John Coale’s X account
It is known that among those released early and deported are journalist Katsiaryna Bakhvalava (Andreyeva), blogger Eduard Palchys, and human rights defenders Valiantsin Stefanovich, Marfa Rabkova, and Nasta Loika.
Eduard Palchys is well known from his blog 1863x.com, which he ran under the pseudonym John Silver. In fall 2020, the blogger was arrested and charged with “incitement of hatred,” “organizing mass riots,” “gross violation of public order,” and “calls for sanctions.” In December 2021, the court sentenced him to 13 years’ imprisonment and ordered him to pay $224,250 to municipal enterprises that allegedly suffered losses due to protests.
Katsiaryna Bakhvalava (Andreyeva) and videographer Darya Chultsova were detained on November 15, 2020, while covering a public memorial for the killed protester Raman Bandarenka in a live broadcast. On February 18, 2021, each journalist was sentenced to 2 years’ imprisonment. Darya Chultsova has already been released, while Katsiaryna was convicted again in July 2022—this time to 8 years in prison.

Katsiaryna Andreyeva with her colleague Alina Koushyk. Vilnius, March 19, 2026. Photo: BAJ
Valiantsin Stefanovich is deputy chair of the Viasna Human Rights Center and a BAJ member. On March 3, 2023, the court sentenced him to 9 years’ imprisonment, finding him guilty of currency smuggling and organizing actions that grossly violated public order. Valiantsin spent 1,709 days behind bars.
Following John Coale’s visit to Minsk on March 19, human rights defenders Marfa Rabkova and Nasta Loika were also released.

Viasna Human Rights Center deputy chair Valiantsin Stefanovich, in his first moments after arriving in Vilnius following his release. March 19, 2026. Photo: BAJ
Belarusian authorities have not disclosed details about the released political prisoners, so some of the names on the U.S. representatives’ lists cannot yet be confirmed as actually freed.
Some journalists whose names appear on the March 19 pardon list remain in Belarus—Belarusian authorities did not deport them. The authorities have not disclosed details about the released political prisoners, so some of the names on the U.S. representatives’ lists cannot yet be confirmed as actually freed.
Dzmitry Navazhylau is the former director of the BelaPAN news agency and a defendant in the criminal case initiated against media employees. He was detained on August 18, 2021. On October 6, 2022, Navazhylau was sentenced to 6 years in prison over “participation in an extremist formation” and “tax evasion”.
Aleh Supruniuk is a journalist from Brest who was detained in January 2025. He spent 7 months in pre-trial detention. On August 8, 2025, he was sentenced to three years of imprisonment. The court found him guilty of “participation in an extremist formation”.
Aliaksandr Marchanka is an advertising specialist sentenced to three years in prison over “establishment of or participation in an extremist formation.” Immediately after his detention on October 19, 2023, he served two 15-day administrative detentions for “distributing extremist content”. While in detention, security forces found grounds for criminal prosecution, charging him with cooperation with Belsat TV.
Valeryia Kastsiuhova is a media expert who was sentenced to 10 years’ imprisonment. She was detained on June 30, 2021, in her Minsk apartment by KGB officers. Her analyst husband and disabled father were also detained. A search of the apartment was conducted, and information carriers were seized. The men were released after questioning, while Valeryia was sent to a remand center. On March 17, 2023, the court found her guilty of conspiracy and other actions committed to seize state power, of calls for restrictive actions aimed at harming national security, and of incitement of social hatred.
Anton Kazelski is a former cameraman for the All-National TV channel. In May 2024, he was convicted of “calls for sanctions and other actions aimed at harming national security” and “incitement of hatred”. For several comments on Telegram, Kazelski was sentenced to 3 years’ imprisonment.
Comment from the Chair of the Belarusian Association of Journalists
Andrei Bastunets emphasized that he has mixed feelings:
“On the one hand, I’m very happy that our friends, our colleagues, have been released. We don’t yet know the exact number and all the names of those released. I hope the release process will continue.
But today we cannot; we have no right to forget about colleagues who remain behind bars. About all political prisoners. Literally a few weeks ago, several of our colleagues were sentenced to enormous prison terms: 9, 12, 14 years.
This shows that the situation in Belarus is not getting better. We would like the authorities’ actions to be consistent, to concern the release of all prisoners and all journalists.”
@bajmedia