KAZAKHSTAN. Protests lead to wave of arrests of journalists
Reporters Without Borders (RSF) condemns a wave of arrests of journalists in Kazakhstan on 21 May in connection with protests against the government’s new agrarian reform laws. The Kazakh free speech NGO Adilsoz said 44 journalists were arrested. Social networks were also cut for several hours.
24.05.2016
The demonstrations against the new laws on the sale and renting of
land have been going on for exactly a month but it was only during the past
weekend that the authorities began cracking down on media coverage of the
protests.
The Facebook, Vkontakte, Twitter and Instagram social networks and
the Viber and WhatsApp messaging services ceased to function in Kazakhstan on
the night of 20 May.
The arrests of journalists throughout the country began the next
morning. Some were arrested as they left their homes. Most were released,
although some were given heavy fines for “disturbing public order.” Lukpan
Akhmedyarov, a journalist in the northwestern city of Oral, was sentenced
to 15 days in prison.
“The repressive machinery has yet again been set in motion in
Kazakhstan,” said Johann Bihr, the head of RSF’s Eastern Europe and Central
Asia desk.
“There were arrests in all of the country’s regions, which means they
were coordinated, despite the interior ministry’s denial. This was a blatant
act of intimidation by a government that feared the popular discontent would
keep growing and decided it was time to silence the protests.”
President Nursultan Nazerbayev announced on 5 May that he intends to
create an information ministry that is independent of the culture ministry. The
initiative is designed above all to reinforce the government’s already tight
grip on media outlets and social networks.
Guzyal Baydalinova, the editor of the opposition online
newspaper Nakanune, has meanwhile just been sentenced to 18 months in
prison on a charge of publishing false information. Two freelance journalists
who wrote the offending articles testified against her. Baydalinova, who has
been held for the past five months, said she was duped.
Kazakhstan is ranked 160th out of 180 countries in RSF’s 2016 World
Press Freedom Index. https://rsf.org/en/ranking
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