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Yauhen Vaskovich
Yauhen Vaskovich
MAHILEU, Belarus -- A Belarusian activist jailed for an arson attack on a KGB office has been transferred from a labor camp in the eastern city of Mahileu, but his family does not know where he is, RFE/RL's Belarus Service reports.

Yauhen Vaskovich, a member of the unregistered opposition Belarusian Christian Democracy party, is serving a seven-year prison term for the attack on the local KGB headquarters in the eastern town of Babruysk in October 2010.

Officials of labor camp No. 15 in Mahileu told RFE/RL that Vaskovich has been transferred from there to "another labor camp," but did not say where. A labor camp duty officer said Vaskovich's relatives will be informed where he is three days after his arrival at the penitentiary to which he is being transferred.

Vaskovich's mother, Rushannya, told RFE/RL she has not been informed about his transfer. She said Vaskovich wrote in his last letter to her that he was to be moved to a so-called closed correctional facility (PTK), where inmates are generally sent for systematically refusing to comply with instructions from prison guards.

Vaskovich has been placed in solitary confinement in the Mahileu labor camp on numerous occasions for refusing to follow guards' orders.

Two anarchist activists, Artsyom Prakapenka and Pavel Syramalotau, were also jailed for seven years over the arson attack.

Vaskovich admitted that he took part in the attack but pleaded not guilty. His two associates pleaded guilty.

The Belarusian Christian Democracy party considers Vaskovich a political prisoner but acknowledges that his involvement in the attack was wrong. Party members say the one year he has already served in prison is enough, and he should now be released.

Read more in Belarusian here
Kastus Shytal
Kastus Shytal
MYORY, Belarus -- An independent Belarusian journalist detained on his way to cover an opposition gathering was found guilty today of verbally insulting police and fined 105,000 rubles ($20), RFE/RL's Belarus Service reports.

Kastus Shytal was arrested on October 7 as he was traveling to the eastern town of Myory to cover the opposition People's Assembly in the nearby town of Dzisna the following day.

Traffic police stopped the car in which Shytal was travelling and told him that his appearance was identical to that of a man suspected of breaking into a car.

Police then took him to Myory, where he was questioned about "verbally insulting the police." Police claim that Shytal used foul language and refused to show his identification when asked.

Shytal spent almost 48 hours in pretrial detention before his trial began on October 10.

Shytal pleaded not guilty and demanded the traffic police who detained him and claim he insulted them be brought to the courtroom to testify.

Judge Vadzim Drabysheuski agreed to that request and adjourned the hearing until today.

Shytal said his case is politically motivated. He said the local authorities wanted him isolated so he would not be able to cover the People's Assembly in Dzisna for the independent online news portal westki.info. Shytal says he will appeal the verdict.

The Dzisna gathering was one of several People's Assembly meetings that were held across Belarus that day.

Read more in Belarusian here

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"Watchdog" is a blog with a singular mission -- to monitor the latest developments concerning human rights, civil society, and press freedom. We'll pay particular attention to reports concerning countries in RFE/RL's broadcast region.

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