HOW THE BELARUSSIAN KGB HAS BEEN TARGETTING THE DIASPORA IN EUROPE
~ Nikita Ivansky ~
In 2023, a scandal broke out when a Belarusian opposition activists signed up
for a job to “research” the Belarusian opposition for a special EU commission
that was supposedly investigating corruption. The job was posted in one of the
oppositional chats and turned out to be a scam created by KGB to collect data.
The scammed activist was even paid small sums for his work. The story climaxed
with the KGB publicly announcing that the activist was working for them—during
one of the security workshops organized by the scammed person.
Last year, a series of video interviews with an opposition journalist for a
documentary were published on the web. The person later turned out to be a
Belarussian KGB agent working out of Belarus. Parts of the interview were later
even published by the state propaganda media to show success in its operations
against the diaspora.
In its fourth decade of existence, the Belarusian dictatorship now stands in the
shadow of the Kremlin and its war in Ukraine. The horrors the Russian army has
visited on occupied territories are quite often much worse than what Belarusian
society has to go through. However, the war against any opposition was started
by Lukashenko in 1994 and continues to this day. And if repressions of
anarchists, antifascists and liberals inside the country quite often ends up in
the mainstream media, the targetting of those living in the diaspora rarely
attracts attention. With hundreds leaving the country after 2020, authoritarian
states are using modern tricks to attack the opposition in “safe” countries.
Belarussian KGB outing its own fake seminar, 2023
Some of the regime’s work is ‘classical’ spying. Military intelligence agent
Pavel Rubtsov, who was extradited by Poland to Russia in August 2024 as part of
a prisoner exchange, transmitted information about the Belarusian opposition in
Warsaw to Moscow. According to the newspaper Wyborcza, Rubtsov, who was working
undercover as Spanish journalist Pablo Gonzalez, informed the leadership in 2020
that he had met with members of the Coordination Council of the Belarusian
opposition, and handed over data about the old and new offices of the “Belarus
House” foundation.
But on the internet, the Belarusian regime’s operations on the internet can
sometimes resemble the activity of scam groups. In the past years, Belarusian
political police has been running several phishing campaigns online, trying to
gather information via unsuspecting activists. The fake EU seminar is a case in
point: for months, the KGB was getting locations of different oppositional
events and names of participants.
In the 1990s, some oppositional politicians were recruited before leaving, and
started to pass information back as soon as they ended up in some western
country. This old-school tactic of recruiting people from society instead of
trying to infiltrate oppositional circles continued through all these 30 years.
Scandals around different activists who signed papers to work for the KGB
continue on a regular basis now in exiled opposition circles. One example is the
case of Fyodor Garbachou, the husband of a Belarusian journalist, who was found
to have an agent passport in the name of Viktar Makeev issued before the
protests of 2020. And even though it is unknown what Fiodor/Viktar was doing
abroad, it is clear that he was recruited at some point in the past to work for
KGB (while still officially working for the Wargaming development company).
This tactic was used by the Tsarist and Soviet secret police for many
generations, not only to be able to control dissidents in exile, but also to
spread paranoia and mistrust within activists circles.
Olga Semashko and Fyodor Gorbachev. Photo: social networks
Pressure points on activists can also be arrests on drug charges or some other
offenses, but also retaliation against their family members. These days it is
quite common for relatives of activists who are living abroad and continuing
political work to be arrested, prosecuted and sentenced to years in a penal
colony on made-up charges. Through the control of relatives within the country,
the Belarusian political police and KGB can control people outside of it,
whether through preventing them from doing political work at all, or making them
work for the regime to collect information on other activists. This is the case
for many anarchists and antifascists who left the country in the past years. One
of the anarchists from Belarus who died fighting in Ukraine is still listed as
anonymous due to possible revenge prosecution of the relatives
Taking these examples into account, we can only imagine the scale of operations
of authoritarian regimes that have much bigger coffers, whether Russia, Iran or
China. Quite often, western activists see those living in exile as a bit
over-paranoid, with vivid imagination. However, as authoritarianism becomes more
pervasive, it is crucial that we fully understand the dangers coming not only
from within the state we are living in, but from outside as well.
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Top photo: Protest in Minsk, 2020. Wikimedia.
The post Lukashenko’s tentacles: Scams, phishing and threats to families
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