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  • A woman, her newspaper and an entire sector under attack in Belarus

    In Belarus, Lukashenka’s regime continues persecuting independent media and silencing critical voices while at the same time attempting to renew the dialogue with the EU. On 20 April the editor-in-chief of Belarusian leading outlet was brutally detained by special forces. 26 journalists and media professionals remain behind bars.

    On 20 April, Belaru­sian spe­cial forces raid­ed the home of Aksana Kolb, edi­tor-in-chief of the inde­pen­dent news­pa­per Novy Chas (New Time), in riot gear, with shields, car­ry­ing sledge­ham­mers. They act­ed like they were arrest­ing a dan­ger­ous crim­i­nal, rather than escort­ing a 53-year old jour­nal­ist and grand­moth­er to yet anoth­er inter­ro­ga­tion. In today’s Belarus, inde­pen­dent media work­ers are labelled as “extrem­ists” and treat­ed like ter­ror­ists.

    Ms. Kolb might not have expect­ed the police on that par­tic­u­lar morn­ing, but their egre­gious actions were hard­ly a sur­prise to her or oth­er local jour­nal­ists. Since the August 2020 pres­i­den­tial elec­tion, the sit­u­a­tion regard­ing free­dom of expres­sion in Belarus has been among the worst in Europe. Media out­lets and jour­nal­ists face unprece­dent­ed repres­sion. Accord­ing to the Belaru­sian Asso­ci­a­tion of Jour­nal­ists, the gov­ern­ment has detained jour­nal­ists over 650 times, arrest­ed and sen­tenced more than 130 media work­ers on admin­is­tra­tive charges, and used vio­lence against and caused injury to 80 jour­nal­ists. More than 60 media rep­re­sen­ta­tives are under crim­i­nal pros­e­cu­tion; 26 are behind bars. 

    While Novy Chas and oth­er out­lets have suf­fered per­se­cu­tion in the past, today the entire inde­pen­dent media sec­tor is under attack. As has been the case with dozens of pub­li­ca­tions, the gov­ern­ment forced Novy Chas to stop issu­ing its week­ly paper, blocked its web­site, repeat­ed­ly detained its jour­nal­ists and pho­tog­ra­phers, and searched its edi­to­r­i­al office and the homes of its employ­ees. In Novem­ber 2021, its founder – the Belaru­sian Lan­guage Asso­ci­a­tion, one of Belarus’ old­est NGOs – was shut down by the author­i­ties. Ms. Kolb was inter­ro­gat­ed sev­er­al times as a wit­ness and sus­pect in oth­er polit­i­cal­ly moti­vat­ed cas­es. Despite the risk, she refused to flee the coun­try, choos­ing to remain close to her paper’s read­ers. While Novy Chas was forced to stop its print edi­tion, it con­tin­ued to appear online – on its web­site, social media pages and mes­sen­ger chan­nels.  

    Until 2020, Novy Chas was a niche pub­li­ca­tion tar­get­ing the country’s intel­li­gentsia. Led by Aksana, who fre­quent­ly authored op eds, it was not linked to any polit­i­cal force but was uncom­pro­mis­ing­ly pro-demo­c­ra­t­ic and pro-Belaru­sian. Novy Chas was the only nation­al week­ly pub­lished in Belaru­sian lan­guage that focused on in-depth socio-polit­i­cal con­tent, his­to­ry and cul­ture, and inves­tiga­tive jour­nal­ism (its lead­ing inves­tiga­tive jour­nal­ist, Dzia­n­is Ivashyn, was jailed in March 2021 and remains a polit­i­cal pris­on­er). 2020 was notable not only because of the protests in Belarus but also for the public’s hunger for objec­tive and inde­pen­dent infor­ma­tion. The print run of Novy Chas more than tripled and the audi­ence of its web­site sky­rock­et­ed, reach­ing over 1 mil­lion vis­i­tors in Sep­tem­ber 2020.

    Aksana Kolb’s arrest high­lights the fact that, despite the government’s attempts to silence inde­pen­dent media, their influ­ence remains strong. It is not sur­pris­ing that the regimes in Belarus and Rus­sia view them as a threat.

    Even among Belarus’ brave and resource­ful inde­pen­dent media, Novy Chas was a unique news­pa­per. Since the paper began pub­lish­ing in 2007, its edi­to­r­i­al team has worked close­ly with human rights defend­ers and civ­il soci­ety groups. It not only fea­tured human rights and civic activists, but also dis­trib­uted free copies to polit­i­cal pris­on­ers. For many behind bars, Novy Chas was their only source of inde­pen­dent infor­ma­tion and only link to the out­side world. After their release, pris­on­ers relat­ed how they had read the paper out loud to their entire cell and dis­played copies that had been passed around to the point of falling apart. After August 2020, when the sites of online media were blocked, grass­roots groups dis­trib­uted hun­dreds of issues of Novy Chas by hand to neigh­bor­hood mail­box­es. 

    This time, after a lengthy inter­ro­ga­tion, Ms. Kolb was detained and placed in Akrestsi­na Prison, Minsk’s infa­mous deten­tion cen­ter. It is a “stan­dard pro­ce­dure” for the author­i­ties to hold sus­pects for up to 10 days, after which they must either release them, file offi­cial charges or detain them again for anoth­er alleged offense. Her case is one more exam­ple that per­se­cu­tion is unremit­ting against the few inde­pen­dent media still left in Belarus. Inter­est­ing­ly enough, this repres­sion is tak­ing place at the same time that Belarus’ Min­is­ter of For­eign Affairs dis­patched offi­cial let­ters to EU gov­ern­ments and the inter­na­tion­al media call­ing for a new dia­logue in the hope that it would lead to the lift­ing of sanc­tions against Belarus.

    Since the first day of Russia’s inva­sion of Ukraine, Belaru­sian inde­pen­dent media have car­ried out time­ly, sys­tem­at­ic and pro­fes­sion­al report­ing on the war. They are pro­vid­ing Belaru­sians with objec­tive infor­ma­tion, detailed analy­sis and human-inter­est sto­ries that counter the pro­pa­gan­da and dis­in­for­ma­tion com­ing from Belaru­sian and Russ­ian gov­ern­ments and state media. More­over, after the Krem­lin shut down Russ­ian inde­pen­dent media out­lets in Feb­ru­ary and March, Belaru­sian dig­i­tal media became an impor­tant source of infor­ma­tion for Russ­ian soci­ety. Inde­pen­dent Belaru­sian news sites observed an increase of traf­fic from Rus­sia and some launched spe­cial projects tar­get­ing Russ­ian audi­ences. As a result, sev­er­al Belaru­sian nation­al and region­al online media – includ­ing Novy Chas – were also blocked in Rus­sia in March 2022. 

    Aksana Kolb’s arrest high­lights the fact that, despite the government’s attempts to silence inde­pen­dent media, their influ­ence remains strong. It is not sur­pris­ing that the regimes in Belarus and Rus­sia view them as a threat. Belaru­sian jour­nal­ists con­tin­ue to work effec­tive­ly and pro­vide cit­i­zens with inde­pen­dent and unbi­ased infor­ma­tion, despite the extreme con­di­tions inside and out­side the coun­try. But the Belaru­sian demo­c­ra­t­ic forces, includ­ing inde­pen­dent media, need more inter­na­tion­al sup­port and sol­i­dar­i­ty, which might help to free Aksana and the country’s more than 1,100 polit­i­cal pris­on­ers.
    On April 20, 2022, Com­mit­tee to Pro­tect Jour­nal­ists (CPJ) issued a state­ment call­ing on Belaru­sian author­i­ties to imme­di­ate­ly release and drop any charges against Ms. Kolb.

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