Viera Cierliukievič (Belarusian: Верa Церлюкевіч, also known as Vera Tserlukevich; 13 October 1941 – 31 December 2000) was one of the most prominent Belarusian female political and trade union activists in the 1990s, identified among “heroic women in the history of Belarus”.
During the anti-Soviet strikes of 1991, which “went down in [Belarusian] history as the most massive demonstration of workers in the struggle for their political rights”,[4][5] Cierliukievič became one of the leaders of a protest movement at her place of work.
The event was organized by the Belarusian Popular Front to protest against attempts to take control of the country by reactionary Communist leaders and reverse democratic reforms.
Cierliukievič addressed the protesters alongside key opposition leaders such as Zianon Pazniak, Piatro Sadoŭski, Siarhiej Antončyk [be] and underlined the important role of workers in the democracy movement.
[6][7] In the second half of the 1990s, she actively participated in numerous protest actions against the regime of President Lukashenka.