From October 1999 to May 2000, Zavadsky and Sheremet were in
Chechnya filming
Chechen Diary, a four-part documentary series for ORT. On 7 July 2000, Zavadsky drove to the
Minsk National Airport to meet Sheremet. Witnesses saw Zavadsky in the airport and his car was later found in the parking lot. Zavadsky has not been seen since. Zavadsky had received threatening phone calls before his disappearance, and his neighbors saw two men trailing him near his apartment building on the day he disappeared. The witnesses helped police artist compile
composite drawings of the two men, but the police refused to release them to the public. According to the
Committee to Protect Journalists, its sources in Belarus suspect that Zavadsky was murdered because he had footage showing Belarusian security agents fighting in Chechnya alongside Chechen rebels. Belarusian officials, including Deputy Minister of Internal Affairs
Mikhail Udovikov, suggested that Zavadsky was abducted either by his colleagues at ORT, including Sheremet, or by members of the local opposition, related to his "pro-Russia" coverage of the Chechen war. On 20 November 2000, independent Belarusian media received an anonymous email from a person who identified himself as an officer of the
Belarus State Security Committee working on the Zavadsky investigation: "The writer claimed that nine suspects had been arrested, seven of whom were either current or former officers of the
Presidential Security Service, and that the suspects had confessed to killing Zavadsky and had named the place where his body was buried. According to the e-mail, the investigators had also found a shovel stained with Zavadsky's blood. Additionally, the e-mail claimed that President Lukashenko refused to allow investigators to exhume the body, and that the case was later transferred from the Prosecutor's Office to the Interior Ministry to sabotage the investigation." — report from
Committee to Protect Journalists The following day, Lukashenko blamed Zavadsky's disappearance on Chechen kidnappers. A week later, Lukashenko fired four of his top officials: his security issues adviser, the chairman of the Security Council, the prosecutor general, and the head of the State Security Committee. Lukashenko asserted that the four had been plotting a ''
coup d'état'' and had abducted Zavadsky to implicate the president. ==Trial==