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  • Foreign ministers of Belarus, Russia discuss functioning of media outlets

    Belarusian Foreign Minister Uladzimir Makiej and his Russian counterpart, Sergey Lavrov, discussed the functioning of Belarusian media outlets in Russia and Russian media outlets in Belarus during their meeting in Minsk on Thursday.

    “I spoke once again to my col­league, Belaru­sian For­eign Min­is­ter Uladz­imir Makiej,” Mr. Lavrov told reporters after the meet­ing. “We have a com­mon under­stand­ing of the need to do every­thing to ensure that Russ­ian media out­lets in Belarus and Belaru­sian media out­lets in Rus­sia work in the most com­fort­able con­di­tions. We have some ideas that we will start to imple­ment soon.”

    On Octo­ber 5, the Russ­ian news­pa­per Kom­so­mol­skaya Prav­da announced that it had decid­ed to close down its Belarus pub­li­ca­tion fol­low­ing the block­ing of its web­site and the arrest of its jour­nal­ist Hien­adź Maže­j­ka.

    Mr. Maže­j­ka is the author of an inter­view with a for­mer class­mate of Andrej Zieĺcer, a Min­sk man who was killed by offi­cers of the Com­mit­tee for State Secu­ri­ty (KGB) dur­ing a raid on his apart­ment on Sep­tem­ber 28.

    Mr. Zieĺcer, a 31-year-old IT work­er, is believed to have fatal­ly wound­ed a KGB offi­cer before being shot dead inside his apart­ment.

    In the inter­view, which was post­ed on the night of Sep­tem­ber 28, a woman who went to school togeth­er with Mr. Zieĺcer described him as a good per­son who “always stood up for truth.”

    On the morn­ing of Sep­tem­ber 29, the Belaru­sian infor­ma­tion min­istry blocked access to kp.by, the web­site of the Belarus ver­sion of Kom­so­mol­skaya Prav­da.

    The move angered the Krem­lin, which described it as a vio­la­tion of media free­dom. Vladimir Putin’s spokesper­son lat­er said that Mr. Mažejka’s arrest “can­not be approved of” if it was relat­ed to his jour­nal­is­tic work.

    Mr. Maže­j­ka has been charged with incit­ing hatred and insult­ing an offi­cial under the Crim­i­nal Code’s Arti­cles 130 and 369, respec­tive­ly.

    On Octo­ber 13, the Par­tyzan­s­ki Dis­trict Court in Min­sk reject­ed an appeal against Mr. Mažejka’s deten­tion, which means that the jour­nal­ist will stay behind bars until at least Decem­ber 1.

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