Homel journalist Yauhen Merkis to serve extra 12 days in jail
September 29, Homel freelance journalist and local history expert, BAJ member Yauhen Merkis was supposed to be released after serving a 15-day arrest on charges of participating in a protest march. However, he did not walk out of the detention center today. Yauhen managed to inform us from behind bars that the police leaves him there for another 12 days — to serve another 12 days from the jail term in August, when he was also arrested for 15 days for alleged participation in an unauthorized mass event.
In August, journalists and protesters were released early in response to the demands of protesters and warning strikes held at numerous factories. In particular, the workers of the Belarusian Metallurgical Plant took to the streets on a solidarity rally, outraged by fraudulent elections and police violence against peaceful protesters. On August 14, speaking at the factory in Zhlobin, chairman of Homel regional executive committee Henadz Salavei declared the release of all those arrested for protest actions.
Yauhen Merkis was one of the released, having served only 3 out of 15 days of jail that he had got for covering the «women’s march» in Homel. Now the police remembered this unserved term.
«This looks like retaliation for streaming from protest marches against the fraudelent election results», — says Yauhen’s colleague Maryna Drabysheuskaya, who’s been just recently released after 10 days in jail under the same charge.
Last time Yauhen Merkis was preventively detained on September 14, together with Maryna Drabysheuskaya. Since then, he’s been kept in the temporary detention center. On 17 September, judge of Navabelitski district court of Homel punished Yauhen with a 15-day jail term for alleged participation in an unauthorized march, despite the fact that Merkis had been working there as a journalist. Yauhen was tried behind closed doors at Navabelitski district police department. Such ‘field’ court sessions have become a common practice the Belarusian police and the courts now.