CPJ Safety Advisory: Covering the European Games in Belarus

A view of the site for the 2019 European Games in Minsk, Belarus. Journalists covering the Games should be aware of local regulations on media accreditation and digital safety issues. (Reuters/Vasily Fedosenko)

A view of the site for the 2019 European Games in Minsk, Belarus. Journalists covering the Games should be aware of local regulations on media accreditation and digital safety issues. (Reuters/Vasily Fedosenko)

The second European Games is scheduled to take place in Minsk, Belarus, from June 21 to June 30. Local and international journalists covering the Games should be aware of media regulations, the potential for data theft, and the risk of a digital security breach.

Over the past two years, CPJ has documented the tightening of regulations on online resources in Belarus, searches of editorial offices, increased prosecutions and harassment of freelance journalists, and arrests of media covering protests. In a submission to the U.N. Human Rights Committee in 2018, Amnesty International highlighted authorities’ use a surveillance framework, known as the System of Operative Investigative Measures (SORM), with which all telecommunications providers operating in Belarus must comply. SORM allows local authorities to carry out real-time monitoring of communications by accessing all user communications and associated metadata, Amnesty found.

Local and foreign journalists covering the Games are legally required to have accreditation. The non-governmental body, the Belarusian Association of Journalists, advised all journalists covering public events to have their accreditation and press insignia clearly on display to avoid prosecution and a fine. Hotel security guards are also allowed to conduct searches and inspections, the association’s memo said.

International journalists should take the following steps to tighten their digital security prior to travel:

While in Belarus, journalists should be aware of the ways that devices could be compromised. To minimize the risk:

Upon returning home:

Journalists requiring assistance should contact CPJ via report_violation@cpj.org or emergencies@cpj.org.

CPJ’s digital Safety Kit provides journalists and newsrooms with basic safety information on physical, digital and psychological safety resources and tools.

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