Journalist for top Polish paper allegedly denied medication in Belarusian prison
A representative of the Polish community in Belarus says a former correspondent for a top Polish newspaper has been denied life-saving heart medication in a Belarusian prison
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Your support makes all the difference.A former correspondent for a top Polish newspaper has been denied life-saving heart medication in Belarusian prison, a representative of Belarusā largest Polish community organization told reporters Tuesday.
Andrzej Poczobut, 50, a former reporter with the Gazeta Wyborcza daily, has been put in solitary confinement with no access to lawyers or medical care, Marek Zaniewski from the Union of Poles in Belarus said at a press briefing.
The countryās largest and most prominent rights group, Viasna, also reported on its website that Poczobut has been transferred to a one-man āpunishment cell" at a prison in Navapolatsk, a city in northern Belarus, where he is serving an eight-year sentence.
Poczobut, a prominent member of Belarusā sizable Polish minority, was found guilty in February of āsowing discordā and harming the countryās national security.
His closed trial in the Belarusian city of Grodno was widely seen as part of Minskās sweeping crackdown on opposition figures and civil society. Belarusā Supreme Court dismissed Poczobutās appeal in May, and he has remained behind bars ever since his detention in March 2021.
Zaniewski, the Polish community leader, described Poczobutās situation as āvery difficultā and said the conditions in which he is held continue to deteriorate.
āAndrzej is being kept in complete isolation, but we have learned that he is not receiving heart medication, which he needs to take every day. This worries us very much,ā Zaniewski said.
Poczobutās wife Oksana told The Associated Press on Tuesday that the conditions of his imprisonment were āakin to torture.ā She said that following his transfer to Navapolatsk prison, he was placed in a āpunishment cellā for refusing to do hard labor. His visiting rights were also revoked.
āAndrzej has been diagnosed with a heart rhythm disorder and high blood pressure. Events have been developing according to the worst-case scenario,ā Oksana Poczobut said.
Poczobut had extensively covered mass protests that engulfed Belarus in 2020 in the wake of the disputed presidential election that handed authoritarian President Alexander Lukashenko his sixth term in office. Both the Belarusian opposition and the West have denounced the vote as rigged.
Poczobutās indictment pointed to his coverage of the protests, his statements in support of ethnic Poles in Belarus and a reference to the 1939 Soviet invasion of Poland as an act of āaggressionā as evidence of his guilt.
The journalist chose to remain in Belarus despite Minskās ongoing crackdown that saw more than 35,000 people arrested, thousands beaten by police, and tens of thousands fleeing abroad.
According to Viasna, the rights group, Poczobut refused to sign a petition to be pardoned by Lukashenko following his detention. The journalistās relatives claimed he was subsequently forbidden family visits and was unable to receive letters from his 12-year-old son.
Polish authorities have repeatedly called on Minsk to release Poczobut, while Belarusian opposition leader Sviatlana Tsikhanouskaya described the verdict against him as Lukashenkoās āpersonal revenge.ā
Viasna has also included Poczobut in its list of 1,496 political prisoners held by Belarus.