Partner of Belarus' dead protester demands independent probe

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Elena German reacts as she speaks during her interview with the Associated Press in Minsk, Belarus, Saturday, Aug. 15, 2020. Alexander Taraikovsky's life-partner Elena German told The Associated Press on Saturday that she is sure her 34-year-old mate was shot by police. German spoke a few hours before Taraikovsky's funeral and burial, an event that could reinforce the anger of demonstrators who for the past have protested what they consider a sham presidential election and the violent police response to their protests. (AP Photo/Mstyslav Chernov)

MINSK – The partner of a demonstrator killed during the protests in Belarus said Monday she will push for an independent probe into his death.

Alexander Taraikovsky, 34, died Aug. 10 as police dispersed peaceful demonstrators contesting the results of the election a day earlier that gave authoritarian President Alexander Lukashenko a sixth term in office. The ferocious crackdown with rubber bullets, stun grenades and clubs helped swell the protesters’ ranks and caused international outrage.

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Authorities initially said Taraikovsky was killed when an explosive device he intended to throw at police blew up in his hands. However, Associated Press video showed that he had no explosives when he fell to the ground, his shirt bloodied.

Elena German, his partner, said his body had a perforation in his chest that she believes was a bullet wound.

On Sunday, Interior Minister Yuri Karayev stepped back from the initial official version, acknowledging that Taraikovsky might have been killed by a rubber bullet.

German described it as the cold-blooded murder of an unarmed protester.

“I don’t believe in the minister’s words, the authorities are lying and trying to avoid responsibility,” German told the AP.

German said that she saw no exit wound on Taraikovsky’s back, indicating that the bullet was stuck inside. She added that she had implored a police investigator to show her the bullet, but he stonewalled the demand, raising her suspicion that Taraikovsky might have been killed by live ammunition.

“Until I see the bullet, I have every reason to believe that it was live ammunition and that he was shot point-blank and killed,” she said.

“Sasha was killed with a shot to his chest at point-blank range,” she said, using her partner's nickname. “He was a peaceful demonstrator and he had nothing in his hands. I demand an independent investigation into his killing. The government should bear responsibility for that.”

The place where Taraikovsky died quickly turned into a pilgrimage site, with thousands of people, including European ambassadors, laying flowers there.

Hundreds of people came to his funeral Saturday to pay their respects. As the coffin was carried out, many dropped to one knee, weeping and exclaiming “Long live Belarus!”

Taraikovsky's death has galvanized public anger, helping swell the demonstrations that attracted an estimated 200,000 to the Belarusian capital's central square on Sunday -- the largest protest the country has ever seen.