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  • Human rights defenders call to drop criminal charges against BelaPAN director

    Statement on the criminal prosecution of Ales Lipai, director of the BelaPAN news agency, and pressure on journalists in Belarus

    https://baj.media/sites/default/files/event/preview/lipaj.jpg

    One month has passed since the author­i­ties opened a crim­i­nal case against head of the country’s lead­ing inde­pen­dent news agency Bela­PAN Ales Lipai. The case was ini­ti­at­ed by the Min­sk Office of the Finan­cial Inves­ti­ga­tions Depart­ment of the State Con­trol Com­mit­tee on charges of “delib­er­ate eva­sion of pay­ment of income tax on a large scale for 2016–2017” (part 2, Arti­cle 243 of the Crim­i­nal Code).

    The cir­cum­stances of the case sug­gest its polit­i­cal bias, which puts it on a par with the con­vic­tion of Ales Biali­ats­ki, head of the Human Rights Cen­ter «Vias­na», under the same charges in 2011, and the ongo­ing pros­e­cu­tion of the lead­ers of the inde­pen­dent Trade Union of Radio Elec­tron­ic Indus­try Work­ers Henadz Fia­dyn­ich and Ihar Kom­lik, whose case will be soon heard by a court.

    The crim­i­nal case against Ales Lipai was ini­ti­at­ed on June 12. Mean­while, a week before that, on June 5, Lipai sub­mit­ted his income tax dec­la­ra­tion for 2016–2017. The same day, the Min­istry of Tax­es and Levies’ Office in the Par­tyzan­s­ki dis­trict of Min­sk imposed on him an admin­is­tra­tive penal­ty for late sub­mis­sion of the dec­la­ra­tion and re-cal­cu­lat­ed the amount of tax­es and fines, which were paid by Lipai in full on June 12.

    Thus, by the time the crim­i­nal case was opened, Ales Lipai had both declared his income and ful­ly paid the tax­es and penal­ties imposed by the tax author­i­ties. Despite this, the case was opened, and two days lat­er Lipai’s apart­ment was searched and his prop­er­ty was seized. On June 26, he was pro­hib­it­ed to leave Belarus before tri­al.

    We believe that these devel­op­ments are linked to the gen­er­al trend of increas­ing pres­sure on the inde­pen­dent media and Inter­net resources in Belarus (includ­ing amend­ments to the law on mass media).

    One of the levers of pres­sure on the inde­pen­dent media is eco­nom­ic dis­crim­i­na­tion against them. It is man­i­fest­ed, in par­tic­u­lar, by an effec­tive pro­hi­bi­tion of for­eign invest­ments in the media, on the one hand, and by the annu­al gov­ern­ment fund­ing of pub­lic media in the amount of EUR 50 mln., on the oth­er. In addi­tion, state-run media enjoy oth­er non-com­pet­i­tive ben­e­fits (com­pul­so­ry sub­scrip­tion to news­pa­pers, inclu­sion of TV chan­nels in the bind­ing pack­ages, adver­tis­ing pref­er­ences, etc.). The mea­sures of finan­cial pres­sure on inde­pen­dent jour­nal­ism include heavy fines award­ed to free­lance jour­nal­ists for col­lab­o­rat­ing with for­eign media with­out accred­i­ta­tion (under Part 2 of Art. 22.9 of the Code of Admin­is­tra­tive Offens­es, which pun­ish­es vio­la­tions of the order of pro­duc­tion and (or) dis­tri­b­u­tion of media prod­ucts and has been arbi­trar­i­ly treat­ed by police and courts). Jour­nal­ists are not fined for the con­tent of their pub­li­ca­tions, but for the fact of their appear­ance in the for­eign media.

    Last year saw a record num­ber of court fines under this charge, with the total amount of 69 fines amount­ing to the equiv­a­lent of almost EUR 53,000 (this is more than in the pre­vi­ous three years com­bined). More­over, this year the sit­u­a­tion has only wors­ened, and the num­ber of con­vic­tions under Part 2, Art. 22.9 has already reached 60, with the amount of fines total­ing to the equiv­a­lent of EUR 50,000. All this hap­pens in a sit­u­a­tion where the issue of the per­se­cu­tion of free­lance jour­nal­ists work­ing with the for­eign media has been for sev­er­al years dis­cussed in the frame­work of the EU-Belarus Human Rights Dia­logue.

    We also view the case of Ales Lipai as an attempt by gov­ern­ment agen­cies to use finan­cial leg­is­la­tion in order to hin­der the work of inde­pen­dent media.

    In con­nec­tion with the above, we:

    - believe that the pros­e­cu­tion of the head of the Bela­PAN news agency Ales Lipai to be relat­ed to his pro­fes­sion­al activ­i­ties, which is an attempt to inter­fere with the work of Bela­PAN, one of the most author­i­ta­tive inde­pen­dent sources of reli­able and time­ly infor­ma­tion about Belarus;

    - call to dis­con­tin­ue the crim­i­nal pro­ceed­ings against Ales Lipai;

    - call to com­ply with the pro­vi­sions of arti­cle 19 of the Inter­na­tion­al Covenant on Civ­il and Polit­i­cal Rights in estab­lish­ing restric­tions on the free­dom of expres­sion and to cease harass­ment of free­lance jour­nal­ists for car­ry­ing out their pro­fes­sion­al activ­i­ties which do not infringe on this free­dom.

    Belaru­sian Asso­ci­a­tion of Jour­nal­ists

    Human Rights Cen­ter «Vias­na»

    Ini­tia­tive FORB

    Legal Ini­tia­tive

    Belaru­sian Helsin­ki Com­mit­tee

    Cen­ter for Legal Trans­for­ma­tion

    Iden­ti­ty and Law

    Assem­bly of Pro-Demo­c­ra­t­ic NGOs of Belarus

    Belaru­sian Doc­u­men­ta­tion Cen­ter

    Barys Zvozskau Belaru­sian Human Rights House

    Advi­so­ry Cen­ter on Cur­rent Inter­na­tion­al Prac­tices and Imple­men­ta­tion of Them in Law “Human Con­stan­ta”

    Edu­ca­tion­al and char­i­ta­ble insti­tu­tion “Com­mit­tee Sol­i­dar­i­ty”

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