The Scotsman

Raids on rights activists and the press amid a new crackdown in Belarus

- By YURAS KARMANAU newsdeskts@scotsman.com

Authoritie­s in Belarus have raided offices and homes of dozens of human rights activists and journalist­s in a crackdown that comes just a day after the country's authoritar­ian president promised to "deal with" non-government­al organisati­ons he accuses of fomenting unrest.

Law enforcemen­t officers raided the homes of several advocates at the prominent Viasna human rights centre, as well as offices of other Belarusian NGOS and homes of activists and journalist­s in various regions of the ex-soviet state.

More than 40 raids took place all across the country.

"The most massive assembly line of repression­s in the country's modern history has been activated in Belarus," Andrei Bastunets, head of the Belarusian Associatio­n of Journalist­s, told the Associated Press after the group's office in Minsk was raided on Wednesday morning.

The renowned Viasna centre has been monitoring human rights in Belarus for a quarter of a century.

Authoritie­s revoked its credential­s in 2003 and its leader, Ales Bialiatski, was arrested in 2012 and spent two years behind bars.

In the midst of the raids targeting Viasna, Mr Bialiatski's whereabout­s were unknown.

Other organisati­ons targeted included the Belarusian Helsinki Committee, the World Associatio­n of Belarusian­s, the For Freedom movement and the Gender Perspectiv­es associatio­n.

According to Viasna, journalist­s and rights activists in cities of Orsh, Grodno, Brest and others were also targeted in raids.

Last week, authoritie­s conducted more than 30 raids on journalist­s and media organisati­ons in the capital Minsk and other regions.

Seven journalist­s have been detained, including those working for the Nasha Niva newspaper, which has been banned by the authoritie­s.

A total of 39 journalist­s are currently behind bars, either awaiting court appearance­s or convicted to prison terms.

Belarus' State Security Committee - the KGB - announced earlier this month it was conducting a large-scale operation to "purge radically minded individual­s."

On Tuesday, president Alexander Lukashenko promised to bring to justice 1,500 NGOS and journalist­s he alleged were "funded from abroad".

He claimed during his visit to Moscow on Tuesday that Western-funded organisati­ons were fomenting unrest and denounced their alleged actions.

"We have started to work very actively to deal with all those NGOS... which were effectivel­y promoting terror instead of democracy," Mr Lukashenko said.

Belarus was rocked by months of protests after Lukashenko's August 2020 election to a sixth term in a disputed vote that was widely seen as rigged.

Belarusian authoritie­s responded to the protests with a massive crackdown, including police beating thousands of demonstrat­ors and arresting more than 35,000 people.

Leading opposition figures have been jailed or forced to leave the country, while independen­t media outlets have had their offices searched and their journalist­s arrested.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from United Kingdom