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  • CPJ condemns Belarus ‘witch hunt’ after three BelaPAN journalists sentenced to lengthy prison terms

    Belarusian authorities must immediately release Andrei Aliaksandrau, Dzmitry Navazhylau, and Iryna Leushyna, three former and current employees of independent Belarusian news agency BelaPAN who were sentenced to prison terms ranging from 4 to 14 years on various charges, the Committee to Protect Journalists said Thursday.

    All three have denied the charges, and Leushy­na and Navazhy­lau plan to appeal the ver­dict, accord­ing to for­mer Bela­PAN cor­re­spon­dent Tanya Korovenko­va, who spoke to CPJ via mes­sag­ing app. CPJ was unable to ver­i­fy whether Ali­ak­san­drau intends to appeal.

    Bela­PAN cov­ered the nation­wide 2020 protests demand­ing Pres­i­dent Alek­san­dr Lukashenko resign, as CPJ has doc­u­ment­ed. On Novem­ber 1, 2021, the State Secu­ri­ty Com­mit­tee of Belarus declared Bela­PAN an extrem­ist group, media report­ed.

    “CPJ is alarmed by today’s sen­tenc­ing of three Bela­PAN jour­nal­ists in a polit­i­cal­ly moti­vat­ed case and denounces the witch hunt against the country’s lead­ing inde­pen­dent news agency,” said Gul­noza Said, CPJ’s Europe and Cen­tral Asia pro­gram coor­di­na­tor, in New York. “Belaru­sian author­i­ties must imme­di­ate­ly release Andrei Ali­ak­san­drau, Dzmit­ry Navazhy­lau, Iry­na Leushy­na, and all oth­er impris­oned mem­bers of the press, and let the media work freely.”

    On Thurs­day, Octo­ber 6, a court in Min­sk, the cap­i­tal, con­vict­ed Ali­ak­san­drau, founder and chief edi­tor of the news web­site Belarus­ki Zhur­nal and for­mer deputy direc­tor of the inde­pen­dent news agency Bela­PAN, of high trea­son, cre­at­ing an extrem­ist group, large-scale tax eva­sion, and “orga­niz­ing or par­tic­i­pat­ing in gross vio­la­tions of pub­lic order,” those reports said.

    The court sen­tenced him to 14 years in prison and fined him 32,000 Belaru­sian rubles (US$12,600). Ali­ak­san­drau has been detained since Jan­u­ary 12, 2021.

    For­mer Bela­PAN direc­tor Navazhy­lau was con­vict­ed of cre­at­ing an extrem­ist group and large-scale tax eva­sion, sen­tenced to 6 years in prison, and fined 22,400 Belaru­sian rubles (US$8,820), those reports said. He has been detained since August 18, 2021.

    Bela­PAN direc­tor and chief edi­tor Leushy­na was con­vict­ed of cre­at­ing an extrem­ist group and sen­tenced to 4 years in prison. She was detained on August 18, 2021.

    The closed-door tri­al began on June 6, 2022, and was sus­pend­ed for two months in June and near­ly two weeks in Sep­tem­ber, accord­ing to reports by the Belaru­sian Asso­ci­a­tion of Jour­nal­ists (BAJ), a banned local advo­ca­cy and trade group. Due to the secre­cy of the pro­ce­dure, the penal­ties request­ed by the state pros­e­cu­tor were not dis­closed before the ver­dict, BAJ report­ed.

    Belarus was the world’s fifth-worst jail­er of jour­nal­ists, with at least 19 jour­nal­ists behind bars on Decem­ber 1, 2021, when CPJ pub­lished its most recent prison cen­sus.

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