Wife of missing Belarus dissident hopes Trump envoy can find him

Belarusian opposition figure Anatol Kotau poses for a picture at undisclosed location in Poland. (Reuters)
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Updated 19 November 2025
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Wife of missing Belarus dissident hopes Trump envoy can find him

  • After many weeks of fruitless efforts to trace him, Kotau’s supporters say they fear he may have fallen into the hands of the Belarusian KGB security service or Russia’s FSB

LONDON: The wife of a Belarusian dissident who disappeared after flying to Turkiye three months ago says she is pinning her hopes of finding him on US President Donald Trump’s new special envoy to Belarus.
Anatol Kotau, 45, flew into Istanbul from Warsaw early on the afternoon of Thursday, August 21. In the following hours, he exchanged a series of Telegram messages with his wife Anastasia in Poland and promised to let her know where he would be staying.
He never did. Then he stopped responding to her.
After many weeks of fruitless efforts to trace him, Kotau’s supporters say they fear he may have fallen into the hands of the Belarusian KGB security service or Russia’s FSB.
As Trump’s envoy John Coale prepares for a new round of negotiations with Belarusian President Alexander Lukashenko to seek the release of political prisoners, Anastasia told Reuters she hoped that her husband’s release could form part of a deal.
If Kotau is indeed detained in Belarus, “then I have great hope for the American negotiations with Lukashenko. And I would really like for my husband’s name to be included on the lists for release, for exchange,” she said in a phone interview, her first with an international news organization about the case. She asked to be identified only by her first name.

WHO IS ANATOL KOTAU?
Kotau is a former top sports official in Belarus who was secretary general of the national Olympic committee and later worked in Lukashenko’s presidential administration. He quit in 2020 in protest over an election that the opposition and Western governments accused the veteran authoritarian leader of stealing.
Mass demonstrations broke out after the election and were crushed by Lukashenko’s security forces. Kotau and Anastasia fled the country with just a couple of suitcases, she says.
Settling in Poland, he found work with an events company but remained active in the opposition. In 2024, he was sentenced in absentia by a Belarus court to 12 years in prison for “extremist” activity and conspiracy to seize power.
Earlier this year, he learned he was also on a wanted list in Russia, the close ally of Belarus.
Anastasia said she did not know the purpose of his visit to Turkiye, for which he took leave from his employer. There was nothing unusual in his behavior before the trip, and he had a ticket to return three days later.

TRAIL LEADS TO BLACK SEA PORT OF TRABZON
Anastasia said she has been told by Turkish authorities that Kotau, on arrival in Istanbul, took another flight to the Black Sea port of Trabzon and boarded a private yacht that evening, heading for Sochi in southern Russia. She does not believe he would have gone there voluntarily, given his wanted status.
In response to inquiries by Reuters, the Istanbul prosecutor’s office did not comment. The Trabzon prosecutor’s office said it did not have a record of a file with Kotau’s name. The police did not respond to a request for comment.
Russia’s border guard service did not reply to Reuters when asked whether Kotau had entered the country.
Authorities in Belarus told Kotau’s mother he was not in the country and reminded her of his conviction and 12-year sentence in absentia. The Belarusian foreign ministry did not respond to questions from Reuters about his disappearance.
On social media, pro-Lukashenko figures have gloated over the case, describing Kotau as a traitor and suggesting, without providing evidence, that he is now in prison.
Dmitry Bolkunets, an exiled Belarusian activist who knows Kotau, called him a key figure in an opposition campaign for Western countries to exert pressure on Lukashenko to win the release of prisoners. He told Reuters he believes that Kotau was most likely lured to Turkiye and kidnapped.
Franak Viacorka, a senior aide to exiled opposition leader Sviatlana Tsikhanouskaya, said the opposition was not satisfied with the information received from Turkiye and believed that the Belarusian security service was implicated in the case.
“Definitely there is a KGB shadow, a KGB trace here.”
Viacorka told Reuters that Tsikhanouskaya’s team had flagged the case to European governments and the United States, whose envoy Coale was successful in persuading Lukashenko to free dozens of political prisoners earlier this year in return for a partial easing of US sanctions.
Trump said earlier this month that Coale was working on the release of 50 more people he described as hostages.
No date has been announced for a new round of talks between Coale and Lukashenko. The US State Department did not respond to a request for comment on Kotau’s case.
Anastasia, waiting for news while she carries on her own job and looks after the couple’s two-year-old son, describes the situation as “horrible.”
Lacking answers, she has wrestled with various dark scenarios: “Maybe some kind of blackmail... Maybe revenge. Perhaps some kind of personal vendetta.”
But she believes her husband is still alive.
“I no longer care why he went to Turkiye or what happened there,” she said. “The main goal is to find him.”


Britain’s Starmer ends China trip aimed at reset despite Trump warning

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Britain’s Starmer ends China trip aimed at reset despite Trump warning

  • Keir Starmer’s visit was the first to China by a British prime minister in eight years
  • Leaders from France, Canada and Finland have flocked to Beijing in recent weeks
SHANGHAI: British Prime Minister Keir Starmer wrapped up a four-day trip to China on Saturday, after his bid to forge closer ties prompted warnings from US President Donald Trump.
Starmer’s visit was the first to China by a British prime minister in eight years, following in the footsteps of other Western leaders looking to counter an increasingly volatile United States.
Leaders from France, Canada and Finland have flocked to Beijing in recent weeks, recoiling from Trump’s bid to seize Greenland and tariff threats against NATO allies.
Trump warned on Thursday it was “very dangerous” for Britain to be dealing with China.
Starmer brushed off those comments on Friday, noting that Trump was also expected to visit China in the months ahead.
“The US and the UK are very close allies, and that’s why we discussed the visit with his team before we came,” Starmer said in an interview with UK television.
“I don’t think it is wise for the UK to stick its head in the sand. China is the second-largest economy in the world,” he said.
Asked about Trump’s comments on Friday, Beijing’s foreign ministry said “China is willing to strengthen cooperation with all countries in the spirit of mutual benefit and win-win results.”
Starmer met top Chinese leaders, including President Xi Jinping and Premier Li Qiang, on Thursday, with both sides highlighting the need for closer ties.
He told business representatives from Britain and China on Friday that both sides had “warmly engaged” and “made some real progress.”
“The UK has got a huge amount to offer,” he said in a short speech at the UK-China Business Forum at the Bank of China.
He signed a series of agreements on Thursday, with Downing Street announcing Beijing had agreed to visa-free travel for British citizens visiting China for under 30 days, although Starmer acknowledged there was no start date for the arrangement yet.
The Chinese foreign ministry said only that it was “actively considering” the visa deal and would “make it public at an appropriate time upon completing the necessary procedures.”
He also said Beijing had lifted sanctions on UK lawmakers targeted since 2021 for their criticism of alleged human rights abuses against China’s Muslim Uyghur minority.
“President Xi said to me that that means all parliamentarians are welcome,” Starmer said in an interview with UK television.
He traveled from Beijing to economic powerhouse Shanghai, where he spoke with Chinese students at the Shanghai International College of Fashion and Innovation, a joint institute between Donghua University and the University of Edinburgh.
On Saturday, Starmer visited a design institute and met with performing arts students alongside British actress Rosamund Pike, who spoke of her children’s experience learning Mandarin.
Later on Saturday, Starmer will arrive in Tokyo for a meeting with Japanese counterpart Sanae Takaichi.
Visas and whisky
The visa deal could bring Britain in line with about 50 other countries granted visa-free travel, including France, Germany, Australia and Japan, and follows a similar agreement made between China and Canada this month.
The agreements signed included cooperation on targeting supply chains used by migrant smugglers, as well as on British exports to China, health and strengthening a bilateral trade commission.
China also agreed to halve tariffs on British whisky to five percent, according to Downing Street.
British companies sealed £2.2 billion ($3 billion) in export deals and around £2.3 billion in “market access wins” over five years, and “hundreds of millions worth of investments,” Starmer’s government said in a statement.
Xi told Starmer on Thursday that their countries should strengthen dialogue and cooperation in the context of a “complex and intertwined” international situation.
Relations between China and Britain deteriorated from 2020 when Beijing imposed a national security law on Hong Kong and cracked down on pro-democracy activists in the former British colony.
However, China remains Britain’s third-largest trading partner, and Starmer is hoping deals with Beijing will help fulfil his primary goal of boosting UK economic growth.
British pharmaceutical group AstraZeneca said on Thursday it would invest $15 billion in China through 2030 to expand its medicines manufacturing and research.
And China’s Pop Mart, makers of the wildly popular Labubu dolls, said it would set up a regional hub in London and open 27 stores across Europe in the coming year, including up to seven in Britain.