Independent Journalism is an Issue for Belarus in the International Arena
On November 24, the European Parliament voted on a resolution saying that Belarus’ progress in upholding democratic values has been “insufficient”. They note that Belarus is taking new political prisoners, harassing the opposition, using capital punishment, and failing to address safety concerns about its first nuclear power plant, being built in Astravets.
MEPs stress that “since 1994 no free and fair elections have been conducted in Belarus” and that its attempts to make progress during 2015 presidential and 2016 parliamentary elections were insufficient. Key sectors of the Belarusian economy are still under state control, no new political party has been registered since 2000, new ways to harass or even jail the opposition are being found, they add.
The resolution calls on Belarus to stop these developments, reiterates the European Parliament’s commitment to support the pro-democratic aspirations of its people and calls on the European External Action Service and the EU Commission “to continue and strengthen support for civil society organizations in Belarus and abroad.”
Among other issues, such as execution of death penalty and threat to environment because of the new nuclear plant, the resolution also calls on the authorities to put an end to political pressure on independent journalism and to administrative prosecution of freelance journalists (article 22.9).
The resolution on Belarus was passed by 468 votes to 21, with 93 abstentions.