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  • Editor in chief of Russian newspaper criticizes blocking of website of its Belarus version

     The editor in chief of Russia’s Komsomolskaya Pravda has criticized the Belarusian authorities’ move to block the website of the popular newspaper’s Belarus edition over an interview with a former classmate of a Minsk man who was killed during Tuesday’s raid by Committee for State Security (KGB) officers on his apartment.

    Andrej Zieĺcer, a 31-year-old IT work­er, is believed to have fatal­ly wound­ed a KGB offi­cer before being shot dead inside his apart­ment.

    In the inter­view, which was post­ed on the web­site on Tues­day night, a woman who went to school togeth­er with Mr. Zieĺcer described him as a good per­son who “always stood up for truth.”

    Speak­ing on Wednes­day, Vladimir Sun­gorkin defend­ed the inter­view, which he said con­tained a cou­ple of innocu­ous phras­es, and con­demned the block­ing of the site as a polit­i­cal­ly moti­vat­ed deci­sion.

    Belarus’ author­i­ties believe that “only state media out­lets” can oper­ate in the coun­try and are pur­su­ing a “tough pol­i­cy to take full con­trol of the media,” said Mr. Sun­gorkin.

    Accord­ing to the jour­nal­ist, the inter­view was avail­able on the web­site for three min­utes before an edi­tor decid­ed to fur­ther tone it down for fear of pos­si­ble penal­ties from the gov­ern­ment. Mr. Sun­gorkin said that the pub­li­ca­tion was being accused of “white­wash­ing a crim­i­nal.”

    The jour­nal­ist expressed fears that a crim­i­nal case may be opened in con­nec­tion with the inter­view. “It’s a great shame that this sto­ry can no longer be accessed, as, if it were avail­able, any­one could read it and become strong­ly sur­prised at the rea­son for shut­ting down the biggest news site in Belarus,” he said.

    The Belarus edi­tion of Kom­so­mol­skaya Prav­da has been unable to print its issues in Belarus since the erup­tion of post-elec­tion street protests in August 2020. It is no longer dis­trib­uted by Belarus’ postal oper­a­tor, Bielpoš­ta, to sub­scribers and is not avail­able at state-run news­pa­per kiosks.

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