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  • CPJ: The Ivulin case shows that the authorities will use any pretext to punish members of the press

    In response to the sentencing of Belarusian journalist Aliaksandr Ivulin to two years imprisonment on Wednesday, the Committee to Protect Journalists issued the following statement of condemnation:

    “Belaru­sian author­i­ties should imme­di­ate­ly and uncon­di­tion­al­ly release jour­nal­ist Ali­ak­san­dr Ivulin and let all mem­bers of the press work freely and safe­ly,” said CPJ Europe and Cen­tral Asia Pro­gram Coor­di­na­tor Gul­noza Said. “Ivulin’s case shows that author­i­ties will use any excuse to pun­ish mem­bers of the press who dare to cov­er protests or oth­er news­wor­thy events that the gov­ern­ment prefers be kept qui­et.”

    Sports journalist Aliaksandr Ivulin sentenced to 2 years in prison

    Ivulin cov­ers soc­cer for Tri­buna, Belarus’s largest inde­pen­dent sports news web­site, and also runs the soc­cer-focused YouTube chan­nel Chest­nOK, which has about 75,000 sub­scribers, accord­ing to Tri­buna direc­tor Mak­sim Berazin­sky, who spoke to CPJ in late 2021, and CPJ research.

    Berazin­sky told CPJ he believed ChestnOK’s inter­views with ath­letes who sup­port­ed the 2020 protests against Alek­san­dr Lukashenko, cou­pled with Ivulin’s pop­u­lar­i­ty on the chan­nel, prompt­ed his June 3, 2021, arrest.

    Ivulin was ini­tial­ly sen­tenced to 30 days in prison for alleged­ly par­tic­i­pat­ing in protests in Min­sk that he was cov­er­ing as a jour­nal­ist; on his 29th day in deten­tion, author­i­ties declared that he was a sus­pect in a crim­i­nal case, and on July 9 charged him with orga­niz­ing vio­la­tions of pub­lic order, accord­ing to media reports from the time. 

    His tri­al at the Sovi­et Dis­trict Court in Min­sk began on Mon­day, Jan­u­ary 17, 2022, and con­clud­ed Wednes­day; Ivulin was found guilty of orga­niz­ing “activ­i­ties bla­tant­ly aimed at dis­rupt­ing social order” and was sen­tenced to two years in prison, accord­ing to news reports and the Belaru­sian Asso­ci­a­tion of Jour­nal­ists, an inde­pen­dent advo­ca­cy and trade group.

    Belarus held at least 19 jour­nal­ists behind bars for their work at the time of CPJ’s most recent prison cen­sus on Decem­ber 1, 2021.

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