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  • Belarus: 18 journalists and bloggers arrested while covering mass protests

    The International and European Federations of Journalists (IFJ and EFJ) have condemned the arrest of 18 journalists and bloggers on March 12 while covering mass protests in several cities, as reported by the Belarusian Association of Journalists (BAJ), an IFJ/EFJ affiliate.

    Opens external link in new windowBAJ also report­ed that four of them — Kate­ri­na Bakhvala­va, Hali­na Abakunchyk, Siarhei Pia­trukhin and Dzmit­ry Har­bunou — were held overnight in a tem­po­rary deten­tion facil­i­ty. The fol­low­ing day the courts found Abakunchyk and Bakhvala­va guilty of breach­ing the admin­is­tra­tive law con­cern­ing free­lance jour­nal­ism and autho­ri­sa­tion to par­tic­i­pate in pub­lic events, a deci­sion which BAJ described as “unlaw­ful, ille­git­i­mate and sub­ject to rever­sal”.

    In addi­tion, Siarhei Pia­trukhin and Dzmit­ry Har­bunou have been today sen­tenced to 15 days of admin­is­tra­tive arrest in Brest while jour­nal­ists Ana­tol Hatouchyts and Larysa Shchyrako­va have been sum­moned to the local police sta­tions to receive their writs to face charges in Homiel court.

    Dur­ing the protests against the “law against social par­a­sites” last Sun­day, law enforce­ment agen­cies unfold­ed a large-scale oper­a­tion to pre­vent jour­nal­ists from cov­er­ing the events in cities like Orsha, Raha­chou, Viteb­sk and Brest. Police offi­cers ham­pered jour­nal­is­tic activ­i­ty under var­i­ous pre­texts includ­ing check­ing doc­u­ments, park­ing vio­la­tions, sus­pi­cion of dri­ving a stolen car, fail­ure to com­ply with the legit­i­mate demands of the police, vio­la­tion of media law, etc.

    The “law against social par­a­sites” requires peo­ple who work less than 183 days a year to pay the gov­ern­ment $250 annu­al­ly. This would affect about 470,000 peo­ple in the coun­try of 10 mil­lion, accord­ing to the offi­cial esti­mates.

    BAJ report­ed that more jour­nal­ists were detained on 12 March than dur­ing all the pre­vi­ous twelve months.

    “The Belaru­sian Asso­ci­a­tion of Jour­nal­ists reminds that a jour­nal­ist is enti­tled to be present at mass events, in pub­lic places where social­ly impor­tant events are held and to trans­mit infor­ma­tion from there,” said the union in a state­ment. “Pros­e­cu­tion of jour­nal­ists for their fideli­ty to their pro­fes­sion­al duty is unac­cept­able.”

    The IFJ backed BAJ in urg­ing the state bod­ies of the Repub­lic of Belarus to imme­di­ate­ly inves­ti­gate these mass vio­la­tions of jour­nal­ists’ rights, to iden­ti­fy the respon­si­ble and bring them to account. They fur­ther demand­ed the gov­ern­ment to take the nec­es­sary mea­sures to pre­vent sim­i­lar attacks and to appeal against court deci­sions to hold the jour­nal­ists admin­is­tra­tive­ly account­able for per­form­ing their pro­fes­sion­al duties.

    “We join our Belaru­sian affil­i­ate and remind the nation­al author­i­ties that, accord­ing to their Con­sti­tu­tion, vio­la­tion of the rights of jour­nal­ists does not only unlaw­ful­ly restrict media free­dom but also infringes the con­sti­tu­tion­al rights of all cit­i­zens to dis­sem­i­nate their views and to receive infor­ma­tion,” said IFJ Gen­er­al Sec­re­tary, Antho­ny Bel­langer.

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