International Women’s Day celebrated in European Parliament with guests from Belarus and Ukraine
March 12, 2025

International Women’s Day celebrated in European Parliament with guests from Belarus and Ukraine


Marking International Women’s Day, the European Parliament on 11 March hosted guests from Belarus and Ukraine – Sviatlana Tsikhanouskaya, Palina Sharenda-Panasiuk, Leniie Umerova and Tata Kepler.

Opening the ceremony, European Parliament President Roberta Metsola said: “Today, we pay tribute to the courageous women across Europe who are standing up for the values so many of us, too often, take for granted.”

In her address, Sviatlana Tsikhanouskaya, leader of Belarus’ democratic forces, thanked the EU and its member states for their support for Belarusian civil society and media. She highlighted the need to keep fighting for the release of the more than 1,200 political prisoners, including 155 women.

We continue to fight for the values that define Europe – freedom, security and prosperity”, Tsikhanouskaya said. She expressed strong support for Ukraine, saying that the fates of Belarus and Ukraine were deeply intertwined. Tsikhanouskaya called for a European perspective for Belarus, and for the EU to tighten its pressure on Lukashenka’s regime. 

EP Plenary session International Women’s Day Celebration

Palina Sharenda-Panasiuk, a Belarusian opposition activist and former political prisoner, called on the EU to pressure the Belarusian regime – through stricter enforcement of sanctions and a full trade embargo – to release its thousands of political prisoners.

Leniie Umerova, a Ukrainian and Crimean Tatar activist, recounted her nearly two-year imprisonment in Russia after being abducted by Russian security forces while attempting to visit her sick father in Crimea. She described the injustices she faced, including physical and psychological abuse, interrogations and solitary confinement. Umerova highlighted ongoing Russian persecution in the occupied territories, where civilians face abduction, deportation and forced labour, with any defiance punished by imprisonment. She shared stories of women subjected to torture and denied medical care.

Tata Kepler, a Ukrainian volunteer in military medicine, shared her experience supporting victims of the war, including those affected by sexual violence. She described her efforts to assist civilians in de-occupied territories, emphasising the war’s deep impact on Ukrainian women and children. She called on the international community to act against Russia’s aggression. 

Tata Kepler also said that over 130,000 Ukrainian women served in the security and defence sector, with many awaiting the return of loved ones from captivity.

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Press release



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