Journalist Ihar Karnei sentenced to eight more months in prison
On December 13, the Shklou District Court found journalist and political prisoner Ihar Karnei guilty of persistent disobedience to the demands of the prison administration. Judge Aliaksandr Tarakanau sentenced the journalist to an additional 8 months in prison.
Taking into account this new sentence, the journalist will be released in October 2026 instead of early February 2026.
As this is the second conviction in the criminal case, there is a possibility that Ihar Karnei’s security level will be increased.
He was transferred to Shklou Correctional Facility No. 17 to serve his sentence for alleged «participation in an extremist formation».
In total, Ihar Karnei has been in prison for almost a year and a half. The journalist was arrested on July 17, 2023 after a search of his apartment.
Ihar Karnei was charged with participating in an extremist formation. State media reported that Karnei had allegedly cooperated with the “extremist” organization Belarusian Association of Journalists, which the KGB had recognized as an “extremist formation” in February 2023. The reason given was ideological and political hostility.
On March 25, 2024, the Belarusian human rights community recognized Ihar Karnei as a political prisoner.
Karnei’s verdict was announced in the Minsk City Court on March 22, 2024. Judge Siarhei Katsar sentenced the journalist to three years’ imprisonment and a fine of $6,000.
Ihar Karnei’s attempt to appeal the sentence was unsuccessful. On June 7, 2024, a panel of the Supreme Court, chaired by Judge Aliaksandr Sauchuk, rejected his appeal. A few days later, the journalist was included in the list of “extremists” on the Ministry of Internal Affairs website and was soon sent to the Shklou correctional facility, where he was immediately subjected to pressure from the administration.
On January 1, Ihar Karnei will turn 57. He has been working in journalism since his student years. In the late 1980s, he co-founded an independent youth newspaper Lider in Orsha with friends and like-minded individuals. He also contributed to Znamya Yunosti, Krasnaya Smena, and Komsomolskaya Pravda newspapers. From 1991, he worked for Zvyazda newspaper.
Between 1994 and 2000, he was a correspondent for the weekly Svobodnye Novosti. In 2000, he joined the RFE/RL Belarus office. Recently, he has been working as a freelance journalist.
In the last few years, he has become interested in local history and blogging. He has written articles for the local history website Kreva.Travel.