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Friday, November 22, 2024

Jan. 6 Political Dissident Seeks Asylum from Authoritarian Biden Regime in Belarus

Described as a 'simple American ... who was seeking justice, asking inconvenient questions, but lost almost everything...'

(Headline USA) An American who faces political persecution stemming from the Jan. 6 uprising at the U.S. Capitol is seeking asylum in Belarus, the country’s state TV reported, in a move that could further heighten tensions between the former Soviet nation and the far-left Biden regime.

Evan Neumann of Mill Valley, California, acknowledged in an interview with the Belarus 1 channel that he was at the Capitol that day but rejected the charges, which include assaulting police, obstruction and other offenses.

The channel aired excerpts of the interview on Sunday and Monday, and promised to release the full version on Wednesday.

“I don’t think I have committed some kind of a crime,” said Neumann, 48, according to a Belarus 1 voiceover of his interview remarks.

“One of the charges was very offensive; it alleges that I hit a police officer,” he added. “It doesn’t have any grounds to it.”

Neumann spoke in English but was barely audible under the dubbed Russian.

Both Belarus President Alexander Lukashenko and Russian President Vladimir Putin have accused the Biden administration of a double standard in criticizing other countries, including Russia and Belarus, for cracking down on antigovernment protests.

Conservatives in America have echoed those criticisms, noting that Democrats currently in power were silent for months during often violent race riots and other left-wing lawlessness—including attacks on federal buildings—that transpired in US cities in the leadup to the 2020 election.

Belarus was rocked by months of protests after election officials gave Lukashenko a sixth term in the 2020 balloting that the opposition and the West have denounced as a sham.

The government unleashed a violent crackdown on the protesters, arresting more than 35,000 people and badly beating thousands of them. The crackdown elicited widespread international outrage.

Putin likewise has come under criticism from the West over the imprisonment of opposition leader Alexei Navalny, the detention of thousands of demonstrators protesting his arrest, and the outlawing of Navalny’s organizations as extremist.

At the same time, the Democrat impeachment proceedings against then-President Donald Trump concerning a Ukrainian phone call shed light on the role that the Obama State Department had played in election-meddling in another Soviet satellite, raising questions as to whether the denunciations of so-called anti-corruption groups were entirely good faith. Some of those groups are supported by leftist oligarch George Soros.

In an interview with NBC in June, Putin suggested that the hundreds of people arrested for rioting at the U.S. Capitol were being subjected to “persecution for political opinions.”

U.S. court documents state that Neumann stood at the front of a police barricade wearing a red “Make America Great Again” hat as Trump supporters tried to force past officers.

Prosecutors claimed Neumann taunted and screamed at the police before putting a gas mask over his face and threatened one officer, saying police would be “overrun” by the crowd.

“I’m willing to die, are you?” prosecutors quoted Neumann saying to the officer.

Police body camera footage showed Neumann and others shoving a metal barricade into a line of officers who were trying to push the crowd back before he allegedly punched two officers with his fist and then hit them with the barricade, according to court papers.

Neumann was identified by investigators after someone who said they were a family friend called an FBI tip line with Neumann’s name and hometown.

He was charged in a U.S. federal criminal complaint, meaning a judge agreed that investigators presented sufficient probable cause that Neumann had committed the crimes.

Messages left for family members of Neumann in Northern California were not returned Tuesday.

Neumann is one of more than 650 people who have been charged for their actions on Jan. 6.

Neumann told Belarus 1 that his photo had been added to the FBI’s most wanted list, after which he fled the country under the pretense of a business trip.

Neumann, who owns a handbag manufacturing business, traveled to Italy in March, and then through Switzerland, Germany and Poland before arriving in Ukraine and spent several months there.

He said he decided to cross into neighboring Belarus after he noticed surveillance by Ukraine’s security forces. “It is awful. It is political persecution,” Neumann told the TV channel.

Belarusian border guards detained him when he tried to cross into the country in mid-August, and he requested asylum in Belarus. Belarus doesn’t have an extradition treaty with the U.S.

“We’ve seen Belarusian state media reporting about this individual Evan Newmann,” State Department spokesman Ned Price said in Washington.

“Due to U.S. privacy laws, we’re limited in what we can say about individual U.S. citizens,” he added, and referred questions to the Justice Department, which said it doesn’t comment “on the existence or nonexistence of requests for apprehension to foreign governments.”

The Belarus 1 anchors described Neumann as a “simple American, whose stores were burned down by members of the Black Lives Matter movement, who was seeking justice, asking inconvenient questions, but lost almost everything and is being persecuted by the U.S. government.”

In a short preface to the interview, the Belarus 1 reporter also said that “something” made Neumann “flee from the country of fairytale freedoms and opportunities”—an apparent reference to the U.S., which has levied multiple sanctions against Belarus over human rights abuses and its violent crackdown on dissent.

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