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Belarusian president Alexander Lukashenko Alexei Nikolsky/PA Images

Belarus authorities raid homes and offices of journalists and human rights activists

Authorities raided the homes of dozens of NGO workers and journalists across the country.

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 inciting 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 across the country.

“The most massive assembly line of repressions in the country’s modern history has been activated in Belarus,” Head of the Belarusian Association of Journalists Andrei Bastunets 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 in prison.

In the midst of the raids targeting Viasna, 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 the 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 in prison 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.”

During a visit to Moscow on Tuesday, President Alexander Lukashenko promised to bring to justice 1,500 NGOs and journalists he alleged were “funded from abroad”.

He also claimed 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,” 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.

Opposition leader Svetlana Tikhanovskaya tweeted on Wednesday that Lukashenko “wants to desolate the whole country”.

“The regime continues its massive attack on human rights defenders, activists, journalists,” she wrote.

Tikhanovskaya was forced to leave Belarus and go into exile with her two children in Lithuania. She is currently visiting Ireland and will be meeting Minister for Foreign Affairs Simon Coveney this week. 

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    Mute Seán Ó Briain
    Favourite Seán Ó Briain
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    Jul 14th 2021, 5:18 PM

    He’s learning well from Putin. If you silence all opponents, you have no opponents.

    120
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    Mute chiqey
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    Jul 14th 2021, 6:22 PM

    @Seán Ó Briain: sure look at the US and UK with Assange– journalism is under threat everywhere

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    Mute George Vladisavljevic
    Favourite George Vladisavljevic
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    Jul 14th 2021, 5:29 PM

    Can we please have an update on journalists and human rights activists in Saudi Arabia and the UAE to start with?

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    Mute John Mc Donagh
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    Jul 14th 2021, 5:32 PM

    @George Vladisavljevic: —-And also Cuba!

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    Mute Dermot N Killian
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    Jul 14th 2021, 5:33 PM

    @George Vladisavljevic: what has that to do with the subject of the article?

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    Mute George Vladisavljevic
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    Jul 14th 2021, 5:36 PM

    @Dermot N Killian: Perhaps the fact that we say absolutely nothing about countries that we deal with economically or have an influence that might affect us. Selective hearing and seeing like.

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    Mute Kieran Woods
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    Jul 14th 2021, 6:30 PM

    @Dermot N Killian: Everything. We (Western nations) cannot condemn human rights abuse in one place and support it in another. We cannot promote civil unrest in one place and clamp down on it elsewhere.
    The Belarusian government is either dealing with genuine civil rights activists or foreign funded organisations that promote unrest, or a mixture of both. The truth is always difficult to ascertain.

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    Mute MrJohne
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    Jul 14th 2021, 5:32 PM

    West will do nothing…
    They know the west will do nothing just talk

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    Mute Brian Flavin
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    Jul 14th 2021, 5:36 PM

    Belarus regime government no human rights. He bigot good friend to putin

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    Mute trebloc01
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    Jul 14th 2021, 7:38 PM

    Not a work against that tyrant in Syria

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    Mute JustMeHere
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    Jul 14th 2021, 10:59 PM

    @trebloc01: What? Did you miss the whole Syrian war or what?

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    Mute Jonathan O'Riordan
    Favourite Jonathan O'Riordan
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    Jul 15th 2021, 2:40 PM

    Has the Irishman who acts as honorary consul in Wicklow yet done the “honorary “ thing and resigned ?

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