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A little peace of mind

Hannah tells the story of two escapes, a dilapidated house in Saksahan, and the search for a place safe from shelling. When we visit her to talk about the new windows in her house, it quickly becomes clear how much loss, fear, and exhaustion lie behind this new home. What new windows can mean for a family that has already had to leave everything behind twice.

Ira Ganzhorn

Humanitarian Aid Officer

A normal workday – but make it Ukrainian

What does everyday life in Ukraine mean when meeting friends, going to cafés and working ordinary days exist alongside air raid alerts, explosions and nights spent in the hallway? In Dnipro, an apparently normal Sunday in a café ends with Shahed drones, ballistic missiles and burning residential buildings. The next morning, life goes on while the damage is being cleared and the figures from the attack become known.

Ira Ganzhorn

Humanitarian Aid Officer

30 Years of Viasna – 40 Years Since Chernobyl: What a Nuclear Disaster Has to Do with Human Rights

When it comes to human rights work in Belarus, the Human Rights Centre Viasna is an indispensable part of the landscape. As the 40th anniversary of the Chernobyl disaster approaches, Viasna is celebrating its own 30th anniversary. This is no mere coincidence...

Florian Wiedemann

Program Manager Belarus

What Russian occupation really means for Ukrainians

When politicians discuss occupied territories during peace negotiations, they speak as if these are empty spaces. But millions of Ukrainians live there. These people are caught in a gray zone with no tools to defend their rights, freedom, property, lives, children, or loved ones.

Oleksandra Matviichuk

Ukrainian human rights lawyer and the head of the Center for Civil Liberties.

How do you survive winter in Kharkiv?

I am sitting in the passenger seat next to my friend Ivanka. Suddenly she says: “Don’t put on your seatbelt.” I laugh. “Is that a new law in Kharkiv?” She answers seriously: “It depends what you’re more afraid of – a car accident or not being able to get out of the car quickly enough during a Russian drone strike.” We laugh. But we don’t buckle up.

Kseniia Levadna

Public Relations Officer

Belarus: the consequences of choosing freedom.

Thousands of people took to the streets in Belarus in 2020 to protest against the authoritarian rule of Alexander Lukashenko. They chose freedom. Today, half a decade later, many of them are paying a heavy price. In Belarus, waving a flag once can turn your whole life upside down.

Ken McBain

LIBERECO Representative in the UK

The light disappears, the life goes on.

Russia is systematically attacking Ukraine’s civilian energy infrastructure. Attacks on power plants and substations are causing massive electricity, heating and water outages and are deliberately targeting the civilian population. Around 60,000 households in Kyiv alone are without electricity, with outside temperatures at -15 degrees.

Kseniia Levadna

Public Relations Officer

Letters of hope: what former prisoners want you to know

We spoke with former political prisoners from Belarus to find out if postcards matter to them. Their answers are moving and show how much a simple act of solidarity can mean. Read their thoughts and join our upcoming letter-writing events!

Kseniia Levadna

Public Relations Officer

Keeping the memory alive: Interview with our president Lars Bünger

In an in-depth interview with The Philanthropist, our founding member and president Lars Bünger talks about the situation of political prisoners in Belarus, the work of Libereco, and why every letter counts.

Lars Bünger

President

Imprisoned and ill – my life in prison

Belarusian journalist Kseniya Lutskina was arrested in 2020 after joining the protests against election fraud and repression. She was later sentenced to eight years in prison for helping to establish independent media. In her blog, she writes about the bad medical situation in pre-trial detention.

Kseniya Lutskina

Journalist, former political prisoner