This is an old version of the site. Go to the new website: Belarus News
Charter'97
áåëàðóñêàÿ âåðñiÿ | forum | ðóññêàÿ âåðñèÿ
news  |  actions  |  photo chronicle  |  show trials  |  documents  |  file  |  projects  
 ARCHIVE 
1998-2002

 ARCHIVE 

SuMoTuWeThFrSa
      1 2 3 4
5 6 7 8 9 10 11
12 13 14 15 16 17 18
19 20 21 2223 24 25
26 27 28        


 SEARCH 

advanced search


 PROJECTS 


ALL PROJECTS

 SUBSCRIBE 

Politics and News from Belarus - Charter'97

 ADVERT 

 ADVERT 




 NEWS 



BELARUS: Authorities expel Polish journalist
11:48, 22/02/2006

The Committee to Protect Journalists condemns the expulsion of a Polish journalist after he legally entered Belarus to report on presidential elections next month.

Border guards detained Gazeta Wyborcza correspondent Waclaw Radziwinowicz on Sunday at the train station in the Western city of Grodno as he was traveling to the capital Minsk. They ordered him to return to Poland saying his name was on a government list of people barred from entering. Radziwinowicz said he had a valid Belarusian visa and accreditation from the Foreign Ministry.

“(President Aleksandr) Lukashenko has destroyed freedom of speech in the country and is trying to punish journalists not under his control on the eve of the March 19 presidential elections,” The Associated Press quoted Radziwinowicz as saying.

“We deplore the expulsion of Waclaw Radziwinowicz, and demand that he and other journalists barred from the country be immediately allowed to return to Belarus and report freely,” CPJ Executive Director Ann Cooper said.

CPJ staff traveled to Belarus in early February to meet with local journalists and reported that government persecution of the country`s few independent newspapers had undermined the integrity of the presidential election. (See news alert of February 10: http://www.cpj.org/news/2006/europe/belarus10feb06na.html)

Belarusian authorities have expelled several journalists ahead of the polls. Agnieszka Romaszewska, a journalist for Polish public broadcaster Telewizja Polska, was detained at Minsk airport and sent back to Poland in December, according to local and international press reports.

Adam Tuchinksi, a Polish photojournalist with the weekly news magazine Przekroj was deported in August and banned from Belarus for five years. The same month, Belarusian authorities refused to admit independent Polish journalist Marcin Smialowski, who had press accreditation and a visa for the country.

CPJ is a New York–based, independent, nonprofit organization that works to safeguard press freedom worldwide. For more information on Belarus, visit www.cpj.org.




 TODAY 



 ADVERT 



1998-2007 © Charter'97. E-mail: charter@charter97.org

Dear Colleagues. Remember, please, you are expected to refer to the Charter`97 Press Center when using the site materials. News export , javascript-informer

Technical Support webmaster@charter97.org. Ads on the site adv@charter97.org                         


Rating All.BY Rambler's Top100
ðåêëàìà: