Hackers try to sell NFT of Belarusian leader’s supposed stolen passport

A group of hacktivists called the Belarusian Cyber Partisans have been attempting to sell a nonfungible token (NFT) featuring the purported passport info of Belarus president Alexander Lukashenko.

The Belarusian Cyber Partisans say the move is part of a grassroots fundraising campaign to fight โ€œbloody regimes in Minsk and Moscow.โ€

The members claim to have hacked into a government database that has the passport info of every Belarusian citizen, allowing them to launch an NFT collection called “Belarisuan Passports,” which includes a digital passport that supposedly features Lukashenkoโ€™s actual information.

Some observers have accused the info on the digital passport of being fake, due to a typo on the front page f the world “Republic” and a misspelling of “Aleksandr.”

The hackers on Twitter said they attempted to sell the NFT collection on Lukashenkoโ€™s birthday on Aug. 30 via the OpenSea marketplace, however, stated that the sale was promptly shut down, and is now looking at other options.

โ€œThe dictator has a birthday today โ€” help us ruin it for him! Get our work of art today. A special offerโ€” a New Belarus passport for Lukashenko where heโ€™s behind the bars.โ€

An OpenSea spokesperson told Gizmodo that the project broke company rules relating to โ€œdoxxing and revealing personal identifying information about another person without their consent.โ€

The Belarusian Cyber Partisans also revealed that they are looking to sell NFTs featuring the passport info of other government officials that are closely connected with Lukashenko.

โ€œWe also offer passports of his closest allies and traitors of the people of #Belarus and #Ukraine. All the funds will go to support our work in hitting bloody regimes in #minsk & #moscow,โ€ the group wrote.

Lukashenko is quite the controversial figure, and has been at the helm in Belarus since the nationโ€™s inception in 1994. Despite being elected on the premise of stamping out corruption, he has been described by the likes of the Organize Crime and Corruption Reporting Project as having โ€œrigging elections, torturing critics, and arresting and beating protestersโ€ in the past.

The hacktivists state that they are vehemently opposed to what they feel is a corrupt regime under Lukashenko, who has also irked the group via his support of Russiaโ€™s invasion of Ukraine.

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In February, The Belarusian Cyber Partisans launched a broader fundraising campaign called the โ€œResistance Movement of Belarus,โ€ which is aiming to ultimately usurp power from Lukashenko via its own self defence forces. The campaign primarily takes donations through crypto assets such as Bitcoin (BTC).

โ€œWe, the free citizens of Belarus, refuse to submit to this state and form the self-defence, as a people’ response to the unleashed terror. Our ultimate goal is the elimination of the dictatorial regime,โ€ the group wrote.