Beness Aijo was born in Rēzekne, Latvian SSR. His father is Ugandan and his mother is Russian. He studied biology at the University of Latvia. On 7 May 2005 Aijo was arrested for setting off smoke bombs during the visit of George W. Bush in Latvia. Later that year Aijo was arrested and sentenced to 9 months in prison for calling to overthrow the political system and subsequently went on hunger strike in prison that lasted for 27 days until his health detoriated to the point he was brought to a hospital. After spending five and a half months in jail his security measure was changed from imprisonment to police surveillance at Aijo's request, where he cited his diabetes. Thereafter, Aijo left Latvia and moved to London, United Kingdom. He studied Medical Microbiology at the University of London, Birkbeck. Later Aijo worked as a construction worker at the Heathrow Terminal 2. He played an active role in political rallies in the UK, where he was involved with the Communist Party of Great Britain and attended pro-Palestinian marches. From May–June 2013 he was in Palestine, where he took part in actions against the Israeli government. While in Palestine Aijo received medical training in the field. On 14 September 2013 in Moscow Aijo participated in the congress of the political partyThe Other Russia. On 19 November 2013 Aijo participated in London in a direct action in memory of Aleksandr Dolmatov. On 29 November 2013 he organized in The Hague further direct action in memory of Dolmatov. Beness was arrested and spent six weeks in Dutch prison.
Involvement in the pro-Russian unrest in Ukraine (2014–present)
In 2014 Aijo departed for the self-declared Republic of Crimea. He was arrested in Donetsk on 1 April 2014 for "preparation of an armed coup to overthrow the government and to undermine the territorial integrity of Ukraine" and deported to the United Kingdom, where Aijo took part of demonstrations for a couple of weeks. In May 2014, despite the ban from entering the country for three years, Aijo attempted to cross into Ukraine together with two more activists. He was detained by the Ukrainian Border Guard, and deported to Latvia, where he was detained by the Security Police and the State Police at Riga Airport. Aijo made claims he had been tortured and beaten by the Ukrainian National Guard. On 16 May the Riga Central District Court ordered Aijo taken into custody and the Security Police commenced criminal prosecution for incitement to violently overthrow the government of Latvia, to change the political system, and to liquidate Latvian national independence. Aijo called the charges "fabricated" and a "political repression" and expressed a desire to obtain an acquittal, as well as a compensation for the moral damages and imprisonment. On the night to 30 May petards and smoke grenades were thrown at the Latvian general consulate in St. Petersburg by members of the far-leftThe Other Russia party, who set up a USSR flag on the façade of the building, distributed pamphlets and demanded release of Aijo. Aijo has participated in several demonstrations in Riga since, including the 15 August demonstration against Latvia's foreign policy towards Russia and to call for the dismissal of Minister of Foreign AffairsEdgars Rinkēvičs. In early 2015, with an ongoing criminal case and while being under police surveillance Aijo fled Latvia by hitch-hiking to Tallinn, where he took a ferry to Finland and then traveled to Russia by bus, eventually arriving in Eastern Ukraine. There he joined the armed forces of the self-proclaimed Luhansk People's Republic in what he described as "military-political work", i.e., writing articles for a local newspaper, but he also expressed a desire to undergo training and sign up for active service. Riga Central District Court subsequently launched a manhunt for Aijo. Aijo later reported taking part in the Pro-Russian rebel military operations in Debaltseve and near Stanytsia Luhanska among other places and being promoted to Sergeant, going from a gunner on an artillery howitzer to a member of a motorized infantry brigade. In the middle of April 2019, Aijo was declared a suspect by the Latvia's State Security Service in a case regarding illegal participation in the pro-Russian unrest in Ukraine. In early 2020 he was detained in Yarensk, Arkhangelsk Oblast, Russia, where Aijo was planning to take part in a protest against the construction of a garbage landfill. Latvian Prosecutor General's Office requested his extradition to Latvia, while Aijo asked Vladimir Putin for a political asylum in Russia.