From the BBC:
“Who is Roman Protasevich?
Belarus dissident journalist in profile”
Belarusian journalist Roman
Protasevich is in police detention in Minsk after the extraordinary diversion
of his Ryanair flight from Greece, denounced by some as a "state
hijacking". Mr Protasevich, 26, and fellow dissident Stepan Putilo
co-founded the opposition Nexta channel on Telegram, used for mobilising street
protests. Nexta and Nexta Live now have nearly two million subscribers,
managing to get round heavy state censorship. Mr Protasevich faces serious
charges. He and Mr Putilo - who calls himself Stepan Svetlov - were put on
Belarus's list of "individuals involved in terrorist activity" last
year. The charge of causing mass unrest can be punished by up to 15 years in
jail. A passenger on the Ryanair plane, Monika Simkiene, said that as the
flight was diverted to Minsk she saw Mr Protasevich panicking. "He just
turned to people and said he was facing the death penalty," she told the
AFP news agency. His girlfriend Sofia Sapega, 23, was also arrested after the
plane landed in Minsk. She is a Russian citizen and a law student at the
European Humanities University in Lithuania.
The small Nexta team is based in
Poland, but also works closely with Belarusian dissidents in neighbouring
Lithuania. The main opposition leader, Svetlana Tikhanovskaya, lives in
Lithuania. Both countries, unlike Belarus, are members of Nato and the EU. Telegram
is a secure messaging app for smartphones - it is one of very few ways
Belarusian dissidents have been able to organise, as the authorities have
cracked down hard on independent media, blocking opposition websites during
last year's giant protests. Nexta Live - pronounced "nekhta", meaning
"somebody" in Belarusian - now has more subscribers than the Nexta
channel. Nexta Live's posts included crowd-sourced photos and videos of police
brutality and informed people about opposition rallies and strikes.
How messenger app bypassed
Belarus news blackout Mass protests erupted across Belarus after Alexander
Lukashenko claimed victory in a 9 August presidential election widely condemned
as rigged.The authoritarian leader has been in power for 27 years. He has
maintained state control over most of the economy, with Soviet-style censorship
and police who beaten up many protesters. Mr Protasevich has
said the Nexta project receives no funding from abroad and relies on ad
revenue. It was launched by Mr Putilo in 2015 as a YouTube music channel, but
soon switched to focus on political content. Mr Protasevich now works
for a different Telegram channel, Belamova. He stepped in to write for it after
blogger Igor Losik was arrested by the Belarusian authorities in June 2020. Some
critics question Nexta's use of information which may not be verified. In one
case, for example, a claim about the arrival of Russian special forces was
later removed and described as a "mistake", BBC Monitoring reported. At
the height of the protests last August Nexta was getting hundreds of messages
an hour from citizen journalists, Mr Protasevich told the BBC. When asked by
BBC Russian if Nexta was a protest hub or a media outlet, Mr Protasevich said:
"It is hard to say who we are. I guess we are primarily Belarusians who
would like to come home and live in a free country without dictatorship."
He left Belarus in 2019 and in January 2020 applied for Polish citizenship.
His parents moved to join him in Poland last August. His father Dmitry is an
army reserve officer who lectured in ideology at a Belarusian military academy.
Roman's anti-Lukashenko activities go back to 2011 - as a teenager he was
expelled from school for taking part in a protest. He was later admitted
to the journalism department of Belarusian State University, but expelled from
there too. Mr Protasevich said he moved to Poland because a friend and fellow
dissident, Vladimir Chudentsov, had been arrested en route to Poland. "I
was the first person who learned about his detention. I was the first person
who fanned the information wave... I also actively spoke up on social networks,"
he said.
^ You can tell Lukashenko is scared
of the Opposition and people like Protasevich since he broke international law
to get him. ^
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