Background
Zianon Pazniak was born in the village of Subotniki in Grodno region.
He graduated from the Belarusian State Institute of Theatre and Arts in 1967 and completed his postgraduate studies at the Institute of Ethnography, Art and Folklore in 1972. In 1981 Pazniak defended his doctoral dissertation on the history of the Belarusian theatre in Leningrad. He worked as a manager of village club, photographer, scientific worker at the Institute of History.
In 1988 Zianon Pazniak made public his researches of alleged NKVD mass executions in the forest of Kurapaty near Minsk. At that time he became a leader of the Belarusian nationalistic movement. In 1988 he was one of the founders of the Belarusian Popular Front and the Belarusian Martyrologue.
From May 1990 till January 1996 Pazniak was a deputy of the Belarusian parliament. As parliamentary deputy, he was the leader of the fraction of the BPF. In 1996 Zianon Pazniak chose to leave Belarus after his party had suffered a devastating defeat in parliamentary elections. He was granted political asylum in the United States.
On June 19, 1997 Belarus's prosecutor's office opened a criminal case against Pazniak accusing him of incitement to ethnic hatred.
Following emigration, Zianon Pazniak is still active in leading the CCP-BPF (the Party of BPF). His endeavour to participate in the presidential elections of 2006 was set back when he refused to forward the requisite number of signatures gathered for his candidacy.
He is a founding signatory of the Prague Declaration on European Conscience and Communism.
Pazniak and his followers refuse to join in the oppositional coalition led by Alexander Milinkevich.