The ‘accidental’ politicians: Meet three women risking everything to fight for democracy

The ‘accidental’ politicians: Meet three women risking everything to fight for democracy

Yulia Navalnaya “did not have a choice.”

That’s what one Ukrainian lawmaker said of the wife of the late Alexei Navalny, who vowed to continue her husband’s political work fighting for democracy in Russia after he died in a Siberian prison last month.

As the first reports of Navalny’s death started to emerge, Navalnaya was in Munich at a security conference. At first, she was not sure whether to believe the reports.

Then, she took to the main stage: “I thought: Should I stand here before you or should I go back to my children? And then I thought: What would have Alexei done in my place? And I’m sure that he would have been standing here on this stage.”

Since that moment, Yulia Navalnaya has turned her husband’s mission into hers.

“I will continue the work of Alexei Navalny. Continue to fight for our country. And I invite you to stand next to me,” she said in a video message, shared on X, just a few days later.

Lisa Yasko, 33 years old and a member of the Ukrainian Parliament, said she can relate. Her partner is in jail in Georgia for opposing the ruling authorities.

Hailing from Kyiv, Yasko became a political activist in 2014 after the so-called Maidan Uprising, which saw Ukrainians take to the streets to demonstrate in favor of closer ties with the European Union, not Russia.

“I believed I should be in politics to make a change, I felt a sense of injustice,” she told CNBC via Zoom last month.

At the time, Ukraine’s pro-Russian president, Viktor Yanukovych, had ignored his country’s parliament and refused to sign a cooperation agreement with the European Union.

In 2019, Yasko met the now-President Volodymyr Zelenskyy and decided to become a lawmaker for his party.

At the start of her political career, Yasko recalls being seen as “the young one,” but said women in politics started to earn “more respect” following Russia’s invasion.

Yasko was among the Ukrainian delegation that traveled to the Munich Security Conference in February to ask Western allies for more support.

Two years into Russia’s full-scale invasion of the country, Yasko said Ukraine is now facing “double or triple the pressure.”

Sviatlana Tsikhanouskaya is also no stranger to fighting for democratic values. She became Belarus’ opposition leader after her husband was taken into custody for challenging the ruling President Aleksandr Lukashenko — a close ally of Russian President Vladimir Putin.

Tsikhanouskaya has been in exile since 2020 after running against Lukashenko in a presidential vote. Lukashenko declared victory in the election. She represents her country at international meetings and advocates for stronger sanctions on Lukashenko, who has pushed for the arrest of hundreds of activists who have challenged his almost three decades in power.

“I call myself an accidental politician,” she told CNBC via Zoom.

“It was 2020 when my husband decided to run for [the] presidency, but he was immediately arrested and impeded from [running]. … Out of love to him, first of all, I decided to run,” she said.

A statement by U.S. Secretary of State Antony Blinken in May 2023 said that Belarus was “unjustly” holding over 1,500 political prisoners.

When asked what keeps her going, Tsikhanouskaya said, “It is [a] huge pain, pain that transforms into energy.”

“Because when every day you wake up with thoughts about your husband … but also pain from all the atrocities, tortures that a person’s experiencing at the moment, you know, you are so angry with this lawlessness,” she added.

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