ZMAGAR

Association of Belarusians in the USA

On 13 December, 123 political prisoners walked free from Belarusian prisons

On 13 December 2025, 123 people were released from places of detention in Belarus. Among them were well-known politicians and human rights defenders, foreign nationals, and people whose health in custody had alarmed relatives and rights groups.

What happened

The releases were officially framed as pardons. In public discussion the episode is most often described as part of a major diplomatic arrangement: talks also covered next steps in relations with the United States, including easing restrictions affecting the potash sector — a key pillar of Belarusian exports. That context is highlighted by, among others, the Associated Press, the BBC, and Radio Free Europe/Radio Liberty.

Some of those freed were moved out of the country: open sources mention transfers toward Ukraine and Lithuania, with individual figures going to other European states. Exact routes and each person’s legal status after release should be checked against fresh reporting and statements by human rights defenders.

Names that appear most often in the lists

Public lists include, among others:

Media coverage also notes nationals of several countries (including US allies and Ukraine), underscoring the international dimension of the list, not only its domestic side.

Health and the “humanitarian” framing

Official wording linked the decision to appeals by other leaders and humanitarian considerations (Novaya Gazeta and others). For years the rights community had demanded the release of the seriously ill and those denied adequate medical care in colonies. For many families, this wave of releases meant the legal act of pardon coincided with hope for proper diagnosis and treatment outside pre-trial jails — even at the cost of forced emigration or an uncertain status abroad.

What lies beyond a single day’s headlines

One mass release does not dismantle the system of political prosecution: open tallies still showed hundreds whom rights defenders count as political prisoners. In early interviews, several of those freed spoke of guilt toward those who remained behind bars — a moral tension that, for many, weighs heavier than political headlines.

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