Chernobyl Way and start of exile Following the start of
Minsk Spring protests against the creation of a
Union State, Pazniak fled into hiding with Siarhei Navumchyk on 25 March 1996. He informed his wife in a letter that he was being "hunted by security forces" and had to go underground. He stated they were going to be charged criminally for organizing Minsk Spring, and that agents stood outside the BPF headquarters and received summons. Afterwards, he went to the
United States in July and requesting
political asylum. He also thought that he would not stay in the United States long, predicting the Lukashenko regime would "only last a year or so". They stated that this occurred in the newspapers
Pahonia and
Svaboda, which was a criminal case under Article 71 of the Criminal Code. He stated that afterwards, BPF intended to abolish the presidency and create a parliamentary republic. Pazniak was accused of disrupting the electoral campaign when he announced his candidacy but later withdrew, citing provocations. He argued that the split was inevitable under a dictatorship due to reliance on foreign grants and limited national support from the
bourgeois. In 2000, he initiated the party's long-term strategy by
boycotting the
2000 Belarusian parliamentary election. He continued to post articles, however, including appearances in
Narodnaya Volya in September which portrayed Soviet Belarus as a time of violence, Russification, and the destruction of cultures. The CEC initially recorded 103,879 collected signatures, but only 73,917 were accepted. His registration was eventually denied because they found that he did not submit the necessary signatures for the threshold of 100,000: although he had collected over 100,000 signatures, it that amount was never submitted. Pazniak criticized Wieck for attempting to secure government cooperation with the OSCE and for allegedly prioritizing German interests, arguing that this effectively helped legitimize Lukashenko's continued rule. He stated that they should not have participated in every election. During an interview at the time, he stated that Belarusians must pay attention to Ukraine because it was a natural ally. It soon went viral as a protest during the time. More than a decade later, Pazniak stated he found the concept amusing but criticized the poem for being primarily written in Russian and for its excessive profanity. Other opposition figures commented on the parody:
Adam Hlobus called it "hackwork," arguing it would have been taken more seriously had it been written in Belarusian, and criticized the writer for anonymity.
Late 2000s In 2008, he was a founding signatory of the
Prague Declaration on European Conscience and Communism, which condemned the crimes of communist regimes. He also condemned the meeting between Lukashenko and Russian President
Dmitry Medvedev in
Sochi. Upon the
European Union attempting engagement with the government again in 2008 and the government joining the
Eastern Partnership, Pazniak strongly criticized the union. He stated it was self-serving and abandoning democratic ideals for the union to engage with Lukashenko, especially with the union extending an invitation to Lukashenko to attend a summit in
Prague on behalf of
Javier Solana. He stated that not boycotting would help the regime carry out falsifications. The 2010 election was followed by massive protests on 19 December, during which more than 600 people were arrested. Among those arrested were prominent opposition figures and presidential candidates including
Uladzimir Niakliayeu. Later on during the mid-2010s, Pazniak remained active through cultural activities. In November 2015, two of Pazniak's books were identified as allegedly containing signs of extremism and were subsequently classified as extremist material. The General Prosecutor's Office concluded that the books included passages allegedly inciting hostility or undermining state order. In the next presidential election, the
2015 Belarusian presidential election, Pazniak continued his boycotting strategy while the split-off BPF party endorsed
Tatsyana Karatkevich. On 19 June 2017, he was unanimously re-elected as Chairman of the Conservative Christian Party – BPF at its XI Congress, which was held in Minsk and attended by 101 delegates.
2020s and protests celebrations in Warsaw in 2023. In 2018, Pazniak received the
Belarusian Democratic Republic 100th Jubilee Medal from the
Rada of the Belarusian Democratic Republic in Exile. Prior to the
2020 Belarusian presidential election, Pazniak asserted that
Viktar Babaryka and
Valery Tsepkalo were Russian-backed candidates, despite presenting themselves as alternatives to Lukashenko. He also stated that Statkevich was a provocateur of the 2010 clashes, and offered slight praise for Sviatlana Tsikhanouskaya for disrupting the political stagnation, but he maintained his call for a boycott. He stated only real change would come from the working class protesting. He called it "inadequate," criticizing Tsikhanouskaya for positioning herself as the protest leader and arguing that the ultimatum was a provocation that would only lead to harsher crackdowns. Pazniak later claimed that Russia was planning a coup d'état in Belarus in 2020. He alleged that Putin intended to support the protestors and push for "free elections" to install a pro-Russian candidate, such as
Viktar Babaryka, as the head of state. In the summer of 2020, Pazniak founded the association Free Belarus, which states its purpose is to "advocate for the protection, development and representation of the Belarusian nation, the Republic of Belarus and Belarusians around the world". Upon founding it, he appealed to the
International Court of Justice to recognize Belarus as an occupied country under Russian control, and proposed that the
Rada of the Belarusian Democratic Republic (BNR Rada) could act as an initiator in the appeal to the ICJ. In 2023, he announced plans to create a Belarusian Security Council in exile alongside representatives of the
Kastuś Kalinoŭski Regiment. The body is intended to coordinate defense and security matters and complement existing opposition structures. == Views ==