Belarus. Media Freedom, Attacks on Journalists JANUARY 2014

Similar documents
Belarus. Death Penalty JANUARY 2015

RE: Addressing the situation of human rights in Belarus at the UN Human Rights Council

The Republic of Belarus. Joint NGO Submission to the UN Universal. Periodic Review. 15 September 2014

MOTION FOR A RESOLUTION

October Introduction. Threats to Freedom of Expression

9 November 2009 Public. Amnesty International. Belarus. Submission to the UN Universal Periodic Review

Belarus Democracy and Human Rights Act of 2011 Prime Sponsor: Christopher H. Smith (NJ-04)

GEORGIA. Parliamentary Elections

Quick facts about Belarus. Position paper on Belarus, May 2016

Jordan. Freedom of Expression JANUARY 2012

Iran. Freedom of Expression and Assembly

Azerbaijan. Authorities continued to use various criminal and administrative charges to stifle critics.

JANUARY 2016 COUNTRY SUMMARY. Gambia

Uzbekistan Submission to the UN Universal Periodic Review

Kyrgyzstan. Kyrgyzstan became a member of the UN Human Rights Council in January 2016.

JANUARY 2017 COUNTRY SUMMARY. Gambia

Christian Aid Ireland s submission on civil society space 31 March 2017

Kazakhstan. Elections. Civil Society JANUARY 2016

Cuba. Arbitrary Detention and Short-Term Imprisonment

HONDURAS. Lack of Accountability for Post-Coup Abuses JANUARY 2013

TEXTS ADOPTED. European Parliament resolution of 12 May 2016 on the Crimean Tatars (2016/2692(RSP))

Oman. Authorities often have relied on provisions in the 2002 Telecommunications Act and 2011 Cybercrime Law to restrict freedom of expression online.

TEXTS ADOPTED. European Parliament resolution of 9 June 2016 on Vietnam (2016/2755(RSP))

UKRAINE. Parliamentary Elections. Rule of Law JANUARY 2013

Angola. Media Freedom

Cuba. Arbitrary Detentions and Short-Term Imprisonment JANUARY 2014

Georgia. Lack of Accountability for Police, Security Service Abuse

TEXTS ADOPTED. European Parliament resolution of 14 September 2017 on Cambodia, notably the case of Kem Sokha (2017/2829(RSP))

Cambodia. Attacks on Political Opposition JANUARY 2018

TEXTS ADOPTED. European Parliament resolution of 7 July 2016 on Bahrain (2016/2808(RSP))

Situation in Belarus Rapporteur: Mrs Sinikka HURSKAINEN, Finland, Socialist Group

5 October

Azerbaijan. Reports of torture and other ill-treatment persisted throughout the year.

Kenya. Conduct of Security Forces JANUARY 2017

Cuba. Legal and Institutional Failings

Tunisia. Constitution JANUARY 2016

Regular Report to the Permanent Council

BELARUS HUMAN RIGHTS DEVELOPMENTS

Uganda. Freedom of Assembly JANUARY 2017

Brussels, 30th March Re: EU-Turkmenistan Partnership and Cooperation Agreement. Dear Members of the European Parliament,

Report of the EaP CSF Monitoring Mission on the civil society, media and human rights situation in Belarus

European Parliament resolution of 17 January 2013 on the human rights situation in Bahrain (2013/2513(RSP))

MOTION FOR A RESOLUTION

ANTI-TERROR LAW [TERRORLAW] Act No. 3713: LAW TO FIGHT TERRORISM [Published in the Official Gazette on 12 April 1991]

Azerbaijan Elections and After

Concluding observations of the Committee against Torture

Cuba. Arbitrary Detention and Short-Term Imprisonment JANUARY 2016

Venezuela. Police abuses and impunity are a grave problem. Prison conditions are deplorable, and fatality rates high due to inmate violence.

Opinions adopted by the Working Group on Arbitrary Detention at its sixty-third session, 30 April 4 May 2012

Turkmenistan. Cult of Personality and Presidential Elections. Civil Society JANUARY 2012

EUROPEAN UNION LOCAL STRATEGY TO SUPPORT AND DEFEND HUMAN RIGHTS DEFENDERS IN TURKEY

International covenant on civil and political rights CONSIDERATION OF REPORTS SUBMITTED BY STATES PARTIES UNDER ARTICLE 40 OF THE COVENANT

Venezuela. Police abuses and impunity remain a grave problem. Prison conditions are deplorable, and fatality rates high due to inmate violence.

JANUARY 2018 COUNTRY SUMMARY. Gambia

UPR Submission Kuwait

Swaziland. Freedom of Association and Assembly JANUARY 2016

DRAFT REPORT. European Parliament 2016/2308(INI) on the 2016 Commission Report on Turkey (2016/2308(INI)) Rapporteur: Kati Piri

Sudan. Conflict and Abuses in Darfur JANUARY 2017

Tunisia: New draft anti-terrorism law will further undermine human rights

Egypt. Political Violence and Torture

Jordan. Arbitrary Detention, Administrative Detention, and Torture

Belarusian authorities must stop persecution of Belarusian human rights defender Leanid Sudalenka

VENEZUELA. Judicial Independence JANUARY 2013

UPR Submission Cuba October 2012

STATEMENT. Election Monitoring and Democracy Studies Centre. on results of the monitoring of the 26 September 2016 Referendum in Azerbaijan

MOTION FOR A RESOLUTION

LEBANON. Torture, Ill-Treatment, and Prison Conditions

JANUARY 2018 COUNTRY SUMMARY. Ethiopia

Concluding observations on the third periodic report of Suriname*

During an interview in 2015, Nguyen Ngoc

Resist #ILLDEMOCRACY. In Europe! FACTSHEET. What is an ill democracy? The ill democracy playbook. Ill democracy in Europe. Resisting ill democracies

Belarus -- What More Can Be Done Remarks by Stephen B. Nix Director of Eurasia Programs, International Republican Institute

Venezuela - Researched and compiled by the Refugee Documentation Centre of Ireland on Wednesday 15 March 2017

Cambodia JANUARY 2017

Europe without political prisoners

BRAVE CAMPAIGN Stand up for Human Rights Defenders

amnesty international LIBERIA

PALAIS DES NATIONS 1211 GENEVA 10, SWITZERLAND

The human rights situation in Sudan

The freedom of religion and expression in Belarus

United Arab Emirates

deprived of his or her liberty by arrest or detention to bring proceedings before court.

UN Security Council, Report of the Secretary-General on the AU/UN Hybrid Operation in Darfur, 12 July 2013, UN Doc S/2013/420. 2

Honduras. Police Abuses and Corruption JANUARY 2014

Situation in Egypt and Syria, in particular of Christian communities

Sri Lanka Draft Counter Terrorism Act of 2018

HAUT-COMMISSARIAT AUX DROITS DE L HOMME OFFICE OF THE HIGH COMMISSIONER FOR HUMAN RIGHTS PALAIS DES NATIONS 1211 GENEVA 10, SWITZERLAND

DRAFT REPORT. EN United in diversity EN. European Parliament 2018/2150(INI) on the 2018 Commission Report on Turkey (2018/2150(INI))

Azerbaijan at the OSCE: Ignoring the Human Dimension. Institute for Reporters Freedom and Safety

Third party intervention by the Council of Europe Commissioner for Human Rights

South Sudan JANUARY 2018

Concluding observations on the second periodic report of Cambodia*

Saudi Arabia. Freedom of Expression, Association, and Belief JANUARY 2015

Bahrain. Right to Assembly JANUARY 2012

Bahrain. Freedom of Expression, Association, and Peaceful Assembly

South Korea. Freedom of Expression JANUARY 2018

BURUNDI. Submission to the UN Universal Periodic Review 15 th Session of the UPR Working Group. Submitted 09 July 2012

MONITORING REPORT ON DEVELOPMENTS IN BELARUS OCTOBER JANUARY 2009

Concluding observations on the fourth periodic report of Uzbekistan*

UN Human Rights Council Universal Periodic Review 19 th UPR session: April - May 2014

Transcription:

JANUARY 2014 COUNTRY SUMMARY Belarus The human rights situation in Belarus saw little improvement in 2013. The state suppresses virtually all forms of dissent and uses restrictive legislation and abusive practices to impede freedoms of association and assembly. Journalists are routinely harassed and subjected to arbitrary arrests and detention. Eight political prisoners remain jailed. Those who have been released continue to face restrictions, ranging from travel limitations to inclusion in law enforcement agencies watch lists. Civil society groups cannot function freely. Belarusian courts sentenced two more people to death during 2013. Media Freedom, Attacks on Journalists Most media are state-controlled, and authorities harass the few independent journalists and outlets that remain. In 2013, police arrested 25 journalists as they covered public protests. Courts sentenced at least four to short-term detention following convictions on misdemeanor charges. The authorities frequently prohibit reporting on public marches and open court hearings. In March, the authorities once again denied registration to Belsat, the Poland-based satellite television channel known for its critical reporting on Belarus. Law enforcement officials warned Belarusian journalists reporting for Belsat that they would face misdemeanor charges if they continue working for an unregistered foreign media outlet. In May, the prosecutor s office issued a warning to Radio Liberty journalist Aleh Hruzdzilovich following him publishing a book about the 2011 explosion in the Minsk metro. The warning noted Hruzdzilovich s doubt regarding the official investigation s results, which led to two people being charged with committing a terrorist attack, sentenced to death, and executed in 2012. The Prosecutor s Office warned Hruzdzilovich he could be stripped of his journalistic accreditation if he continued to spread false information. 1

In April, a court designated as extremist the 2012 Belarus Press Photo Contest photo album, following a complaint filed by a regional department of the state security service (KGB), and ordered that its entire print-run be destroyed. The album s images included news and art-related topics, and included photos depicting police violence against protesters. The KGB complaint claimed that the album contained intentionally distorted facts about Belarus and undermined the country s national honor and dignity. In November 2012, Belarusian customs officials at the Lithuanian-Belarusian border confiscated the album s entire print-run. In two positive developments, the authorities in June allowed a visit to Belarus by the Organization for Security and Co-operation in Europe s (OSCE) Representative on Freedom of the Media, and in May 2013 registered Arche-Pachatak, an independent monthly that had been denied registration four times in previous years. In March, Arche-Pachatak s bank account was reactivated, after being frozen in October 2012 due to a criminal investigation into its finances, which revealed no violations. In June, the KGB dropped criminal charges against blogger Anton Surapin, who had been charged in 2012 with complicity in illegal border crossing after posting in his blog photographs of a cross-border freedom of speech protest. In March, the authorities dropped a criminal investigation against Andrey Pochobut, the Belsat journalist accused of libel by President Aliaxander Lukashenka. In July, a court lifted all restrictions imposed on Novaya Gazeta journalist Iryna Khalip in connection with the two-year suspended sentence she received in 2011 for rioting ; the court confirmed the restrictions did not require renewal. Khalip s sentence appears to have been retaliation for her critical reporting on the December 2010 protests in Minsk. Freedom of Association Belarusian legislation provides for a wide range of grounds to deny registration to nongovernmental organizations (NGOs) and establishes a maximum tw0-year prison sentence for involvement in an unregistered group. The authorities rigorously enforce this legislation and burdensome NGO reporting requirements, and also conduct sudden NGO inspections. These actions force civil society groups to function on the margins of the law. 2

Unregistered groups are not able to rent office space officially and are frequently raided by the state security services. In 2013, the authorities issued warnings to at least three activists for involvement in unregistered groups. In June, the authorities pressed unfounded criminal charges against Aliaksei Shchadrou, a devout Catholic, for allegedly establishing an unregistered religious organization by opening a shelter with a prayer room for homeless people in his house. Police raided Shchadrou s house twice, in February and April. During the February raid, the police confiscated his religious books. In September, the criminal case against Shchadrou was dropped. In July, parliament adopted amendments to laws regulating political parties and public associations, but failed to loosen draconian regulations for NGOs. Parliament refused to hold hearings on a proposal by 25 Belarusian NGOs to improve legislation governing NGOs, including by simplifying the registration procedure. Freedom of Assembly Authorities showed little tolerance in 2013 for peaceful gatherings: most were prohibited and some marred by excessive police force. Throughout 2013, dozens of peaceful protesters were convicted on misdemeanor charges and sentenced, some repeatedly, to short-term detention. In April, police held four environmental activists in preventative custody to stop them from attending a march in Minsk to commemorate the 1986 Chernobyl nuclear disaster. Police severely beat a protester at the march, which was peaceful, and detained four journalists who covered it. In August, police detained two members of the Viasna Human Rights Center while handing out postcards in support of the group s imprisoned leader Ales Bialiatski. A court fined each 3 million Belarusian rubles (approximately US$350) for violating regulations on organizing public events. 3

Harassment of Civil Society Groups In October 2012, the Economic Court of Minsk ruled to dissolve Platforma, a prison monitoring group, for alleged tax violations. In November, the appeals court upheld the ruling in absentia, ignoring the group s request for its representatives to be present for the hearing. In March, Taxation Ministry officials attempted to seize the property of the Belarusian Helsinki Committee (BHC), the oldest human rights organization in Belarus, for the group s alleged failure to pay taxes on foreign grants it received in 2002 and 2003. In previous years, the authorities attempted to dissolve the BHC for alleged tax violations and issued warnings against the group for violating NGO legislation, apparently in retaliation for its human rights work. In February, following the second, unsuccessful attempt by Gay Belarus the lesbian, gay, bisexual, and transgender rights group to register, the authorities launched an anti-lgbt campaign. Police raided gay clubs in various Belarusian cities, and law enforcement authorities questioned at least 60 group members. Imprisonment of Critics and Opposition Members At time of writing, 11 political prisoners remain behind bars, including Ales Bialiatski, the head of Viasna Human Rights Center, who has been in jail since 2011 on politically motivated charges of tax evasion. They have limited access to lawyers and face arbitrary reprimands (administrative punishment) and ill-treatment. Among those arrested in 2013 was Andrei Haidukou, a political opposition activist and leader of the unregistered Union of Young Intellectuals. In July, a court convicted him on charges of attempted cooperation with foreign intelligence services, which may be linked to him seeking a grant from the United States government to support his work. The court sentenced him to one-and-a-half years imprisonment. Former political prisoners who have been pardoned or released early remain on police watch lists, which give police grounds to frequently question them. None have had their civil and political rights fully restored: they are prohibited from running for or occupying 4

public office and must obey restrictions that limit their ability to engage in activism, including a curfew; bans on involvement in demonstrations; and a requirement to inform the authorities about any changes to their places of residence all misdemeanor offenses. Committing three misdemeanor offences in one year may result in another criminal sentence. Death Penalty Belarus remains the only country in Europe and Central Asia that uses capital punishment. In 2013, Belarusian courts sentenced three people to death. In October, the Supreme Court of Belarus annulled one of these, regarding a murder case, and ruled that the case be reinvestigated. Those condemned to death in Belarus are refused the opportunity to bid farewell to their relatives, families are not informed of the date of execution in advance, and the burial place is not disclosed. At time of writing, no one had been executed during 2013. Key International Actors Throughout the year, Belarus continued to demonstrate little interest in changing its international pariah status. In the lead up to the November 2013 Eastern Partnership Summit, the European Union demonstrated willingness to engage in dialogue with the Belarusian government by suspending a visa ban against the foreign minister, enabling him to travel to Brussels in July for the first high-level visit of a Belarusian official to EU headquarters since the 2010 government crackdown. A European Parliament recommendation to EU institutions on EU policy towards Belarus, adopted in September, suggested to use the important opportunity presented by the November summit to gradually improve EU-Belarus relations. Progress on visa facilitation and readmission agreements, however, remained stalled over Belarus failure to release political prisoners and make steps towards improving the human rights situation. Stefan Fule, European commissioner for enlargement and neighborhood policy, noted in 5

September that use of death penalty, political prisoners, and harassment of civil activists meant that Belarus "had little progress to report." In his first and highly critical report on Belarus published in May, United Nations Special Rapporteur on Belarus Miklos Haraszti called human rights restrictions in the country systemic and systematic. In June, the UN Human Rights Council voted to extend the special rapporteur s mandate, which Belarusian authorities refused to recognize, denying Haraszti a visa. In June, the OSCE representative on freedom of the media urged Belarusian authorities to address the problems of the country s restrictive media legislation. 6