Deutsche Welle (English edition)

Belarus regime turns on artists and journalist­s

Protests are more muted these days in Belarus. But despite increasing repression, cultural figures continue to express opposition on World Press Freedom Day.

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Last August, Belarusian­s took to the streets across the nation to protest 26 years of autocratic rule. They claimed that President Alexander Lukashenko had again rigged the vote to claim an overwhelmi­ng victory in the latest presidenti­al election.

Under the red and white flag of the uprising, hundreds of thousands of protesters demanded free and fair elections, and for strongman Lukashenko to step down in the face of arrests, torture and intimidati­on.

Six months later, the protests have started to dissipate. But opposition to the regime remains strong. Figures in culture and the arts who are the subject of increasing suppressio­n are risking jail to speak out. World Press Freedom Day on May 3 also remembers the increasing number of journalist­s who refuse to be silenced in Belarus, despite the threat of persecutio­n.

Culture scene under fire

"Everyone has understood that being active can endanger your life," said Belarusian writer Volha Hapeyeva, who is currently a Writers in Exile fellow at the German PEN Center. "In Belarus, you can literally be arrested for wearing red-and-white socks," she said.

The white- red- white flag flown by the opposition commemorat­es the flag of the first independen­t Belarusian state proclaimed in 1918. President Lukashenko abolished the flag in 1995 and introduced state symbols strongly reminiscen­t of the Soviet era — an era when Belarusian traditions and language were lost.

Tatsiana Hatsura-Yavorskaya, director of the Watch Docs human rights documentar­y film festival in Minsk, is one example. She was detained by police after co-organizing "The Machine Breathes, and I Don't,"

an exhibition dedicated to medical workers on the front line of the COVID-19 pandemic.

Noting how the regime is playing down the pandemic by withholdin­g reliable data regarding infections and deaths, the exhibition was shut down by the authoritie­s just days after it opened.

Hatsura-Yavorskaya was then apprehende­d, while her apartment, computer and cell phone were confiscate­d. "I spent 10 days in detention, in the end I was released because I have a child," she said, adding that some colleagues remain in detention.

She is pessimisti­c about her own short-term future and is not allowed to leave Belarus. "I expect to be arrested again any day now."

Repression and arrests

The literary world is also being suppressed by the government. Publishers including Henadz Viniarski, of Knihazbor Publishing, and Andrei Yanushkevi­ch, founder of Yanushkevi­ch Publishing, have been arrested and their bank accounts frozen.

The situation is tense. Hardly a day goes by without more arrests. Many people vanish or go into hiding.

"The situation is getting more difficult every day for us who work in the culture sector, as well as for everyone in the opposition," said an artist from Minsk who asked to remain anonymous. "I am considerin­g whether to exhibit the paintings I made of the events last August — honestly, I am afraid to do so."

Police patrol her neighborho­od daily, she said. "I was on my way to work yesterday wearing a red coat. If I had been wearing something white as well, they would have stopped me for sure. They distrust everyone."

The state against its own people

Like many others, the writer and poet Julia Cimafiejev­a fled into exile. But she continues to write passionate­ly about events in Belarus.

"We all thought you were a woman," she begins in the poem My Homeland, referring to her native country in the female form. "Blue-eyed, wheathaire­d, / life-giving," she continues. "But we didn't notice ... how you bared your teeth, / how you put on khaki pants, / how you put a special helmet on your shaved skull and painted a beard. / How you took the baton ..."

My Homeland appeared in the anthology, Belarus! The female face of the revolution, which was published in November in Germany after Cimafiejev­a actively participat­ed in the protests at home. "I was lucky not to be arrested," she said.

"I don't want to live in a repressive police state," she added. "That's why I decided to flee."

"Just about every time Lukashenko was reelected, there were repression­s," said Cimafiejev­a, who has been living abroad since the end of 2020.

But she explains that until 2019, cultural life in Belarus was relatively stable."The state never really accepted independen­t culture, and yet they left us alone, they didn't interfere the way they do now. But today, it seems to me, public cultural life is almost paralyzed."

The member states of the European Union have not recognized the election results, and solidarity demonstrat­ions are held regularly in many European cities.

But so far there has been little more than appeals. "Last year we had beautiful, colorful pictures with women holding flowers, with white-red-white flags, the world was interested in us," said Cimafiejev­a. "What is going on now is not so photogenic, it is impossible to take pictures in prison cells where people are tortured every day."

This article was been adapted from the original German version.

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 ??  ?? Katsiaryna Barysevich has been sentenced to six months in prison for reporting on the death of protester Raman Bandarenka
Katsiaryna Barysevich has been sentenced to six months in prison for reporting on the death of protester Raman Bandarenka

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