No calls, No letters: Dzianis Ivashin cut off from the outside world for months
On October 6, the family of imprisoned journalist Dzianis Ivashyn finally received postcards from him — the first in more than a month of silence. All correspondence except with close relatives is forbidden.
For 32 days, Ivashyn had sent no letters or postcards. His wife, Volha Ivashyna, believes this was because he was held in a punishment cell. She assumes that since October 1, he has been transferred back to a regular cell. However, he will remain in a high-security prison at least until June 2026, she said.
Ivashyn has been behind bars for four and a half years, since March 12, 2021. KGB officers arrested him a day after he gave an interview to the independent TV channel Current Time.
On September 14, 2022, the Hrodna Regional Court convicted Ivashyn over treason and illegal collection and dissemination of private information. Judge Valery Ramanouski sentenced him to 13 years and one month and fined him $9,030.
In June 2023, authorities tightened his punishment, transferring him to a high-security prison. Neither his lawyer nor his relatives were informed of the court hearing that approved the transfer.
Before his arrest, Ivashyn worked as a correspondent for the independent national newspaper Novy Chas. He was known for investigations into the influence of the “Russian world” in Belarus and Syria, the controversial construction near the Kurapaty memorial site, and, in his last article, the presence of former Ukrainian “Berkut” officers in Belarusian security forces.
In 2014, Ivashyn took part in Ukraine’s Revolution of Dignity in Kyiv, later joining the InformNapalm international volunteer community as an OSINT researcher and translator, eventually becoming editor-in-chief of its Belarusian-language edition.
