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  • Report: Women journalists are frontline warriors at the protests and in prisons in Belarus

    Amidst all these censorship and harassment tactics the women journalists are risking their lives when they cover the protests and report on the state’s atrocities from the frontlines. Many women journalists have been detained and forced to stay silent. In detentions, they suffer assaults at the hands of authorities. Some of the excruciating details of the tortures in these detention centers were also exposed by the women journalists.

    Belarus has always been a chal­leng­ing coun­try when it comes to press free­dom as the mas­sive crack­down against crit­i­cal voic­es became more intense after last year’s elec­tion. The chal­lenges have mul­ti­plied for women jour­nal­ists espe­cial­ly as the envi­ron­ment is becom­ing more repres­sive with every sin­gle day. More than five hun­dred jour­nal­ists are said to have faced deten­tion since last year. Accord­ing to data doc­u­ment­ed by The Coali­tion For Women In Jour­nal­ism, 77 women jour­nal­ists faced dif­fer­ent sorts of harass­ment, deten­tion, and impris­on­ments in the year 2020. The num­ber is 15 until this year and it is increas­ing every day. 

    Accord­ing to the Belaru­sian Asso­ci­a­tion of Jour­nal­ists, the impris­oned jour­nal­ists have col­lec­tive­ly spent more than 1200 days in prison. It has also been report­ed that the state-owned pub­lish­ing house refused to print for five news­pa­pers. A major crack­down was exe­cut­ed and Tut.By news offices. The news out­lets’ offices were raid­ed, equip­ment was con­fis­cat­ed. There were reports of sev­er­al arrests. The web por­tal and social media accounts were also blocked. The harsh and threat­en­ing response towards jour­nal­ists and news media has result­ed in a five-point decline in the coun­try’s rat­ing in the Press Free­dom Index doc­u­ment­ed by RSF. Belarus stands at 158 out of 180 coun­tries. The country’s press free­dom sit­u­a­tion is even worse than Rus­sia. 

    CFWIJ doc­u­ment­ed the release of Tut.By cor­re­spon­dent Kat­siary­na Bary­se­vish, the staff reporter was final­ly released from the Belaru­sian deten­tion cen­ter after com­plet­ing her sen­tence peri­od on May 19. Kat­siary­na was tak­en into police cus­tody for vio­lat­ing med­ical con­fi­den­tial­i­ty in her inves­ti­gat­ing sto­ry regard­ing a mur­dered activist. The day Kat­siary­na was released, Tut.By offices were raid­ed and many staffers were report­ed to be detained by the author­i­ties. Their equip­ment was con­fis­cat­ed and social media sites and accounts were blocked. 

    Only a few days before the raid at Tut.By offices, their staff reporter Lyubov Kasper­ovich was detained by the author­i­ties and lat­er charged with fif­teen days in prison for her cov­er­age of a mass demon­stra­tion held in Min­sk. The jour­nal­ist was detained on May 14 while she was cov­er­ing the tri­al of 12 young oppo­si­tion sup­port­ers. In the same man­ner, pho­to­jour­nal­ist Tat­syana Kapi­ton­a­va was detained for cov­er­ing an unau­tho­rized event on May 13. Police arrest­ed her while she was record­ing at the event. Accord­ing to the eye­wit­ness­es, police inten­tion­al­ly came to arrest her. There was a mas­sive crack­down report­ed against jour­nal­ists and civil­ians as they were orga­niz­ing a protest ral­ly against Pres­i­dent Alexan­der Lukashenko. It was report­ed that most of the arrest­ed jour­nal­ists were women. 

    Giv­en the dete­ri­o­rat­ing sit­u­a­tion of the coun­try, CFWIJ has been keep­ing an eye on the unfold­ing events around press free­dom in the coun­try. We have signed a joint state­ment ear­li­er with the inter­na­tion­al orga­ni­za­tions call­ing all the EU agen­cies to apply their restric­tions and sanc­tions against Belarus. The plat­form has designed an in-focus page con­tain­ing all the impor­tant infor­ma­tion and doc­u­ment­ed state­ments of a num­ber of women jour­nal­ists. The page is cre­at­ed to appre­ci­ate the ded­i­cat­ed women jour­nal­ists of Belarus who despite all the hard­ships show up at work and break bar­ri­ers to pur­sue their pas­sion. A lot of infor­ma­tion can be found regard­ing the jour­nal­ists report­ing on the ground in our Twit­ter thread and State­ments. Also, there is record­ed instaL­ive where you may hear the first-hand sto­ries of the strug­gle of women pro­test­ers.

    Belaru­sian par­lia­ment moved anoth­er bill to fur­ther legal­ize their abuse of pow­er on April 2. The pro­posed bill includes amend­ments in mass media law and mass gath­er­ings law. If the bill gets par­lia­men­tary approval it will fur­ther dimin­ish the press free­dom in the coun­try as well as restrict the work­ing jour­nal­ists even more. The bill includes con­di­tions like expand­ing legal restric­tions on news media out­lets and more author­i­ta­tive pow­er for author­i­ties to refuse any sort of accred­i­ta­tion or shut them com­plete­ly. The pro­posed rec­om­men­da­tions will fur­ther restrict women jour­nal­ists from report­ing on mass events in the coun­try. 

    The Coali­tion For Women In Jour­nal­ism reg­is­tered the case of deputy chair­man of Belaru­sian PEN cen­ter, Tat­siana Niad­bai who was inter­ro­gat­ed by an inves­ti­ga­tion com­mit­tee on March 3. The inter­ro­ga­tion was in link with a raid on Press Club that was done on Decem­ber 22, 2020. The hous­es of sev­er­al Press Club employ­ees were also raid­ed. Tat­siana had worked as a coor­di­na­tor at the Press Club until 2017. The jour­nal­ist could not reveal any details after inter­ro­ga­tion as author­i­ties made her sign a non-dis­clo­sure form. Darya Chultso­va and Kat­syray­na Andreye­va, both were arrest­ed in Novem­ber 2020 for cov­er­ing a protest ral­ly. The jour­nal­ists were live-stream­ing the police tor­ture in the ral­ly that was held in the mem­o­ry of mur­dered protest activist, Raman Ban­daren­ka. Both women jour­nal­ists were sen­tenced to two years in prison on Feb­ru­ary 18, for their report­ing on state oppres­sion. 

    CFWIJ also doc­u­ment­ed the arrest case of Ali­na Skrabuno­va, a Bel­sat TV cor­re­spon­dent who was arrest­ed for report­ing on a ral­ly held in sup­port of an oppo­si­tion can­di­date. Ali­na was released the same day and was fined 1,350 Belaru­sian rubles. A for­mer woman jour­nal­ist, Kse­nia Lut­ski­na was harassed by author­i­ties over tax eva­sion charges. She was detained on Decem­ber 22, 2020, at a shop­ping cen­ter she had gone shop­ping for. The author­i­ties raid­ed her house and took the equip­ment in con­fis­ca­tion. On Jan­u­ary 17, CFWIJ report­ed the case of Tat­siana Bub­likawa, a Bela­PAN reporter who suf­fered police mis­treat­ment after a raid was con­duct­ed at her office in Min­sk. The police mis­han­dling caused her pan­ic attack and the jour­nal­ist end­ed up in the hos­pi­tal. 

    The Coali­tion For Women In Jour­nal­ism reached out to Belaru­sian Jour­nal­ists Asso­ci­a­tion to learn the lat­est updates. The deputy chair­per­son of BAJ Barys Haret­s­ki shared in the state­ment, “Pres­sure on the media in Belarus has been sky­rock­et­ing since last sum­mer. This year we have faced an unprece­dent­ed lev­el of repres­sion against jour­nal­ists. In less than a year we’ve seen over 550 deten­tions of jour­nal­ists, more than 70 cas­es of vio­lence against jour­nal­ists, and 34 media rep­re­sen­ta­tives are being held behind bars at the moment. Half of the jour­nal­ists in cus­tody are women, some of them report declin­ing health. Many print out­lets have been effec­tive­ly destroyed by the author­i­ties, with more than 50 media web­sites remain­ing blocked. Last year’s wide­spread deten­tions and admin­is­tra­tive arrests of jour­nal­ists were main­ly replaced by arrests on crim­i­nal charges, where jour­nal­ists face up to 7 years in prison. This is a major crack­down on inde­pen­dent media and bru­tal sup­pres­sion of free speech.”

    Accord­ing to the lat­est reports around the pro­posed bill, CFWIJ believes that the bill will cause more chal­lenges to work­ing jour­nal­ists in Belarus in an already tense sit­u­a­tion of press free­dom. These pro­posed amend­ments will pro­hib­it pro­fes­sion­al jour­nal­ists from report­ing freely on gov­ern­ment mat­ters. As men­tioned in the bill, the pro­posed law also denies jour­nal­ists from doing any live-stream­ing of any unau­tho­rized mass event. The police will be giv­en more pow­er to stop any film­ing or pho­tog­ra­phy hap­pen­ing at the protests. The Coali­tion For Women In Jour­nal­ism demands that the Belaru­sian par­lia­ment reject these unjus­ti­fied demands pro­posed in the ill just to curb the remain­ing press free­dom in the coun­try. We demand the Belaru­sian gov­ern­ment to release all the women jour­nal­ists that are being held unlaw­ful­ly.

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