Imprisoned radio host Aleh Khamenka added to extremist list
The name of Aleh Khamenka, sentenced to 3 years imprisonment and a substantial fine, appeared on May 29, 2026, on the Belarusian Ministry of Internal Affairs website in the list of persons “involved in extremist activities.” The site also notes that the cultural figure is “serving his sentence.”

Aleh Khamenka. Photo: Onliner
On March 4, 2026, Minsk City Court sentenced Aleh Khamenka to three years imprisonment and a substantial fine of over $7,320.
Initially it was reported that the musician was found guilty of facilitating extremist activities.
However, according to the Ministry of Internal Affairs’ announcement adding Aleh Khamenka to the extremist list, he was convicted of creating or participating in an extremist formation. Another charge concerned “organizing or preparing actions that grossly violate public order, or actively participating in them.” Notably, the maximum penalty under this article is limited to five years imprisonment.
On May 8, the Supreme Court reviewed Aleh Khamenka’s appeal against the verdict issued by the Minsk City Court. The ruling handed down by the country’s highest judicial body remains unknown. It is possible that the Supreme Court altered the set of charges against Khamenka, as it did in the case of freelance journalist Viachaslau Lazarau, whose charges were reclassified in November 2023 from “facilitating extremist activity” to “participation in an extremist formation.”
Before the appeal hearing, Aleh Khamenka was transferred from the Minsk Remand Center to a similar facility in Vitsebsk.
Background
Musician, educator, composer, producer, and radio host Aleh Khamenka is known as a promoter of Belarusian music through radio. He is the creator of folk-modern — a new direction in contemporary Belarusian music — and leader of the popular band Palats (Palace).
He graduated from the Belarusian State University of Culture. In 1992, he founded the band Palats, with which he recorded six studio albums. In 2008, he completed graduate studies in cultural studies at the same university and worked as a senior lecturer in the Variety Show Direction department.
In 2008, he participated in the national selection for Eurovision with the song “Kola Hrukatala” (The Wheel Rumbled). In 2009, he created the Bela Music festival, held at the Baravaya airfield. After 2020, Palats members remained in the country and occasionally performed.
In the 2000s, he created and hosted the program Brama Isnasci (Gate of Existence) on Avtoradio, and from the late 2000s began collaborating with Radio Racyja. His music programs Tuzin Hitoŭ (Dozen Hits) and Folk-brama (Folk-gate) aired for many years until his detention.
Belarusian Radio Racyja is a radio station that broadcasts 24/7 in Belarusian in Belarus, Poland, and Lithuania on FM and online. It provides information about socio-political, economic, and cultural events in Belarus and the world. The media’s newsroom has been based in Białystok, Poland, since 1999.
Since September 2021, access to the radio station’s website for visitors from Belarus has been blocked by order of the Ministry of Information. On January 16, 2024, by decision of the KGB, Belarusian Radio Racyja was designated an “extremist formation.”
Under current Belarusian legislation, persons recognized as participants in an extremist formation can be prosecuted for “establishing or participating in an extremist formation” or “facilitating extremist activities”. Penalties under these articles include up to 10 years imprisonment.
@bajmedia