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.”


Blair dropped from Gaza ‘peace board’ after Arab objections

Updated 55 min 11 sec ago
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Blair dropped from Gaza ‘peace board’ after Arab objections

  • Former UK PM was viewed with hostility over role in Iraq War
  • He reportedly met Netanyahu late last month to discuss plans

LONDON: Former UK Prime Minister Tony Blair has been withdrawn from the US-led Gaza “peace council” following objections by Arab and Muslim countries, The Guardian reported.

US President Donald Trump has said he would chair the council. Blair was long floated for a prominent role in the administration, but has now been quietly dropped, according to the Financial Times.

Blair had been lobbying for a position in the postwar council and oversaw a plan for Gaza from his Tony Blair Institute for Global Change that involved Jared Kushner, Trump’s son-in-law.

Supporters of the former British leader cited his role in the Good Friday Agreement, which ended decades of conflict and violence in Northern Ireland.

His detractors, however, highlighted his former position as representative of the Middle East Quartet, made up of the UN, EU, Russia and US, which aimed to bring about peace in the Middle East.

Furthermore, Blair’s involvement in the Iraq War is viewed with hostility across the Arab world.

After Trump revealed his 20-point plan to end the Israel-Hamas war in September, Blair was the only figure publicly named as taking a potential role in the postwar peace council.

The US president supported his appointment and labeled him a “very good man.”

A source told the Financial Times that Blair’s involvement was backed by the US and Israel.

“The Americans like him and the Israelis like him,” the person said.

The US plan for Gaza was criticized in some quarters for proposing a separate Gaza framework that did not include the West Bank, stoking fears that the occupied Palestinian territories would become separate polities indefinitely.

Trump said in October: “I’ve always liked Tony, but I want to find out that he’s an acceptable choice to everybody.”

Blair is reported to have held an unpublicized meeting with Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu late last month to discuss plans.

His office declined to comment to The Guardian, but an ally said the former prime minister would not be sitting on Gaza’s “board of peace.”