Accessibility links

Breaking News

Watchdog

In an interview with RFE/RL's Kazakh Service, a former oil worker in troubled western Kazakhstan, Nurlybek Nurgalyev, talks about being wounded after police and security forces fired on striking oil workers in the city of Zhanaozen.

Clashes between police and out-of-work laborers left at least 16 people dead and around 100 wounded. The violence erupted on December 16 in the oil-rich western province of Manghystau following months of tension.

WATCH:

Wounded Kazakh Oil Worker Interview
please wait

No media source currently available

0:00 0:04:57 0:00
Syarhey Kavalenka
Syarhey Kavalenka
VITSEBSK, Belarus -- Medical personnel have begun forcibly feeding a jailed political activist on hunger strike in eastern Belarus, RFE/RL's Belarus Service reports.

Syarhey Kavalenka, 37, is a member of the Belarusian Conservative Christian Party-Belarusian Popular Front in the city of Vitsebsk. Police detained Kavalenka on December 19 and charged him with violating his parole conditions.

Kavalenka has been on hunger strike for a month to protest his detention.

Kavalenka's wife, Alena, visited the detention center in Vitsebsk on January 18 to try to give some juice to her husband in case he decides to end his hunger strike. But an officer representing the detention center's medical department told her that he will not accept the juice for Kavalenka as "he is currently being forcibly fed."

When Alena asked the officer for details about the "forced feeding," the officer answered that Kavalenka is handcuffed to his bed and "a soup solution is being put into his body via a feeding pump."

Alena Kavakenka in Vitebsk on January 18
Alena Kavakenka in Vitebsk on January 18
Also today, investigator Syarhey Volkau rejected Alena's application to see her husband. That is the third such rejection she has received since Kavalenka's arrest on December 19.

Kavalenka was sentenced in January 2010 to three years of "limited freedom" for "illegally displaying the banned Belarusian national flag" in a public place.

The Belarusian opposition often uses the white-red-white banner of the short-lived 1918 Republic of Belarus, which also served as the first flag of post-Soviet Belarus until it was replaced and outlawed in 1995.

Kavalenka could be sentenced to three years in jail if found guilty of violating his parole.

Read more in Belarusian here

Load more

About This Blog

"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.

Subscribe

Journalists In Trouble

RFE/RL journalists take risks, face threats, and make sacrifices every day in an effort to gather the news. Our "Journalists In Trouble" page recognizes their courage and conviction, and documents the high price that many have paid simply for doing their jobs. More

XS
SM
MD
LG