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  • Belarus authorities sentence journalist Aleh Hruzdzilovich to prison; label more media ‘extremist’

    Belarus authorities should reverse their recent designations of German public broadcaster Deutsche Welle (DW), local independent news site Regiyanalnaya Gazeta, and three videos by Russian blogger Yuriy Dud as “extremist”; release journalist Aleh Hruzdzilovich, a former correspondent with U.S. Congress-funded broadcaster Radio Free Europe/Radio Liberty’s Belarusian service known locally as Radio Svaboda; and allow all journalists and news outlets to work freely, the Committee to Protect Journalists said Friday.

    Belarus’ Pres­i­dent Alexan­der Lukashenko attends a joint exer­cis­es of the armed forces of Rus­sia and Belarus out­side the cap­i­tal Min­sk on Feb­ru­ary 17, 2022. Belaru­sian author­i­ties have sen­tenced jour­nal­ist Aleh Hruzdzilovich to prison and des­ig­nat­ed more media as «exter­mist.» (Max­im Guchek/Belta via AFP)

    On March 3, the Savet­s­ki Dis­trict Court in Min­sk sen­tenced Hruzdzilovich to a year and a half in prison for alleged par­tic­i­pa­tion in three protests in 2020, accord­ing to the Belaru­sian Asso­ci­a­tion of Jour­nal­ists (BAJ), an inde­pen­dent trade and advo­ca­cy group, and a report by Radio Svabo­da.

    Hruzdzilovich denied the charges, say­ing he was work­ing as an accred­it­ed cor­re­spon­dent with Radio Svabo­da and wear­ing a press jack­et dur­ing the first protest, accord­ing to those reports. After author­i­ties revoked the accred­i­ta­tion of Radio Svabo­da jour­nal­ists in August 2020, he cov­ered the oth­er two protests for inde­pen­dent news­pa­per Nar­o­d­naya Volya, as the newspaper’s chief edi­tor tes­ti­fied in court.

    Author­i­ties in Belarus launched an unprece­dent­ed wave of repres­sion against media out­lets and jour­nal­ists fol­low­ing pop­u­lar protests against the dis­put­ed pres­i­den­tial elec­tion in August 2020, as CPJ has doc­u­ment­ed. The des­ig­na­tions of DW and Region­al­naya Gaze­ta as extrem­ist takes the num­ber of media out­lets labelled as such to 20, which include major out­lets such as Radio Svabo­da, Belarus’s largest news agency Bela­PAN, the country’s most pop­u­lar news web­site Tut.by and its mir­ror site Zerkalo.io, and broad­cast­ers Bel­sat and Euro­ra­dio, accord­ing to a list sent to CPJ by BAJ and CPJ report­ing.

    “The label ‘extrem­ist’ in Belarus has long become a syn­onym for any­one, espe­cial­ly media out­lets, who dares to offer an inde­pen­dent pic­ture of the vio­lence Pres­i­dent Alek­san­dr Lukashenko has unleashed against his own peo­ple over the past 18 months,” said Gul­noza Said, CPJ’s Europe and Cen­tral Asia pro­gram coor­di­na­tor, in New York. “Author­i­ties in Belarus must imme­di­ate­ly remove the work of Deutsche Welle, Regiyanal­naya Gaze­ta, Yury Dud, and all oth­er news out­lets from their reg­is­ter of extrem­ist mate­ri­als and stop using the country’s extrem­ism leg­is­la­tion to silence inde­pen­dent jour­nal­ism.”

    “We call on Belaru­sian author­i­ties to imme­di­ate­ly release jour­nal­ist Aleh Hruzdzilovich, drop all charges again him, and stop pros­e­cut­ing mem­bers of the press for their cov­er­age of impor­tant news events,” Said added.

    On Jan­u­ary 20, a court in the Mal­adzech­na dis­trict near the Belaru­sian cap­i­tal Min­sk declared the web­site and Telegram chan­nel of local inde­pen­dent news out­let Regiyanal­naya Gaze­ta extrem­ist, accord­ing to news reports and a report by BAJ, and on Feb­ru­ary 24, the court declared 15 of the outlet’s arti­cles from 2020 extrem­ist, the BAJ report stat­ed.

    Regiyanal­naya Gaze­ta close­ly cov­ered the 2020 protests and sub­se­quent tri­als of pro­test­ers in the Mal­adzech­na dis­trict and sev­en oth­er near­by dis­tricts, accord­ing to an inter­view with the outlet’s chief edi­tor Alyak­san­dr Mant­se­vich by Radio Svabo­da from 2021. CPJ was unable to open Regiyanal­naya Gaze­ta’s web­site.

    On Wednes­day, March 9, the Cen­tral Dis­trict Court in Min­sk declared all “infor­ma­tion prod­ucts” by DW extrem­ist, effec­tive­ly ban­ning the broad­cast­er in the coun­try, accord­ing to news reports and a Telegram announce­ment by the Main Direc­torate for Com­bat­ting Orga­nized Crime and Cor­rup­tion (MDCOCC) of the Inte­ri­or Min­istry of Belarus, on whose appli­ca­tion the case was heard.

    Under the rul­ing, all media pro­duced by DW and its Belaru­sian Telegram chan­nel and chat group, includ­ing the “DW” logo, are to be rec­og­nized as “extrem­ist,” these reports stat­ed. DW has been blocked in Belarus since Octo­ber 2021, accord­ing to those news reports.

    Any­one con­vict­ed of pro­duc­ing, stor­ing, or spread­ing mate­ri­als des­ig­nat­ed extrem­ist can be fined up to 960 rubles (US$290) or detained for up to 15 days, accord­ing to the admin­is­tra­tive code of Belarus; legal enti­ties will be sub­ject to a fine of up to 16,000 rubles (US$4,844) for the same offens­es.

    Despite the des­ig­na­tion, DW intends to con­tin­ue its report­ing on Belarus as nor­mal, accord­ing to an announce­ment on the broadcaster’s Belaru­sian Telegram chan­nel. CPJ emailed DW for com­ment but did not receive a reply.

    In a state­ment released Thurs­day, March 10, the broadcaster’s Direc­tor Gen­er­al Peter Lim­bourg denounced the des­ig­na­tions, describ­ing them as “cheap tricks to cre­ate pseu­do-legal grounds to take action against peo­ple who make use of their right to free speech,” adding that the crim­i­nal­iza­tion of the DW logo “proves how ner­vous the regime [in Belarus] is.”

    As in pre­vi­ous such instances, the MDCOCC announce­ment about DW warned of pros­e­cu­tion even for sub­scrib­ing to Telegram chan­nels and chats of out­lets des­ig­nat­ed as extrem­ist. Aleh Aheyeu, Deputy Direc­tor of BAJ, told CPJ by mes­sag­ing app that he is not aware of any­one who has been pros­e­cut­ed for this offense alone; how­ev­er, any mate­r­i­al down­loaded, even auto­mat­i­cal­ly, from apps such as Telegram could be pros­e­cut­ed as stor­ing extrem­ist mate­r­i­al, accord­ing to a report on the association’s web­site.

    Sep­a­rate­ly, the MDCOCC announced Thurs­day, March 10, that the Cen­tral Dis­trict Court had declared three videos pub­lished by pop­u­lar Russ­ian blog­ger Yury Dud, who has almost 10 mil­lion sub­scribers on his YouTube chan­nel vDud, as extrem­ist. The videos, which have over 30 mil­lion views, report on a Belaru­sian stand-up com­ic who fled the coun­try and per­forms anti-Lukashenko mate­r­i­al, ordi­nary Belaru­sians who have also been forced to flee, and the Telegram chan­nel NEXTA, whose founder Raman Prata­se­vich was arrest­ed after Belaru­sian author­i­ties downed a com­mer­cial flight specif­i­cal­ly to detain him.

    CPJ called the Min­istry of Interior’s press ser­vice for com­ment, but no one answered.

    On June 19, 2021, law enforce­ment offi­cers raid­ed Regiyanal­naya Gaze­ta’s office and Mantsevich’s home, con­fis­cat­ing equip­ment, fol­low­ing which the out­let ceased pub­li­ca­tion in paper for­mat, accord­ing to reports and BAJ.

    Author­i­ties pre­vi­ous­ly jailed Hruzdzilovich for 15 days in 2020 for par­tic­i­pat­ing in anoth­er protest that he was cov­er­ing as a jour­nal­ist and detained him for 10 days with­out charge fol­low­ing a raid on Radio Svaboda’s Min­sk office in July 2021, the Radio Svabo­da report stat­ed.

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