• Actual
  • Law and the media
  • Helpful
  • Work areas and campaigns
  • Reviews and monitoring
  • Belarus website editor slapped with heavy fine

    Reporters Without Borders (RSF) condemns the heavy fine that a court in Minsk imposed today on Maryna Zolatava, the editor of the leading news website Tut.by. The fine is just one more attempt to intimidate the few remaining independent media outlets in Belarus, RSF said.

    Con­vict­ed of “neg­li­gence” for alleged­ly let­ting her staff use the dis­patch­es of the state-owned news agency BelTA with­out a sub­scrip­tion, Zolata­va was ordered to pay a fine of 7,650 rubles and court costs of 6,000 rubles, or a total of more than 5,600 euros – the equiv­a­lent of the aver­age annu­al salary in Belarus.

    Zolata­va and a dozen oth­er jour­nal­ists were held for sev­er­al days after raids on Tut.by and the inde­pen­dent news agency Bela­PAN last August, when the pro-gov­ern­ment media sub­ject­ed both media out­lets to an intense smear cam­paign. Zolata­va, who had faced a pos­si­ble five-year jail term, was the only one to be tried on crim­i­nal charges. Her col­leagues were ordered to pay dam­ages to BelTA with­out being tried.

    This heavy fine con­sti­tutes the lat­est act of intim­i­da­tion against the last inde­pen­dent media out­lets in Belarus,” said Johann Bihr, the head of RSF’s East­ern Europe and Cen­tral Asia desk. “The way the author­i­ties per­sist­ed with this case, which was out of all pro­por­tion from the out­set, shows their deter­mi­na­tion to under­mine the state media’s rivals. It is high time the inter­na­tion­al com­mu­ni­ty, espe­cial­ly the Euro­pean Union, took steps to end the esca­lat­ing crack­down in Belarus.”

    Dur­ing the tri­al, the defence insist­ed that Tut.by’s arti­cles were sys­tem­at­i­cal­ly post­ed after BelTA’s dis­patch­es had been pub­lished – a quar­ter of an hour after their pub­li­ca­tion for sub­scribers.

    Sev­er­al jour­nal­ists said they had been pres­sured to pro­vide tes­ti­mo­ny for the pros­e­cu­tion. The IP address­es used to access the BelTA web­site are shared not only by Tut.by’s jour­nal­ists but by all vis­i­tors to Tut.by’s art gallery. Zolata­va and her col­leagues learned in the course of this case that their phones had been tapped, in vio­la­tion of the con­fi­den­tial­i­ty of their sources.

    Zolatava’s tri­al came amid efforts by the Belaru­sian author­i­ties to tight­en their grip on the media. They include a dra­con­ian new media law, block­ing of lead­ing news sites and an unprece­dent­ed wave of fines against inde­pen­dent jour­nal­ists. Belarus is ranked 155th out of 180 coun­tries in RSF’s 2018 World Press Free­dom Index.

    The most important news and materials in our Telegram channel — subscribe!
    @bajmedia
    Most read
    Every day send to your mailbox: actual offers (grants, vacancies, competitions, scholarships), announcements of events (lectures, performances, presentations, press conferences) and good content.

    Subscribe

    * indicates required

    By subscribing to the newsletter, you agree to the Privacy Policy