Katsyaryna Andreeva (Belarusian: Кацярына Андрэева; Russian: Катерина Андреева; real name: Katsyaryna Andreevna Bakhvalava; Belarusian: Кацярына Андрэеўна Бахвалава; born November 2, 1993) is a Belarusian journalist. She worked for the television network Belsat TV. She broadcast the event from the Square of Changes in Minsk where Raman Bandarenka was beaten to death in 2020.
She was arrested on site on November 15, 2020. She was sentenced to two years in prison. In 2022, she was sentenced to am additional eight years in prison on charges of "state treason", which Amnesty International called bogus.[1][2]
Early life and career
She was born in Minsk in a family of journalists. She studied for about two and a half years in Minsk State Linguistic University, then she moved to Spain. She taught English there for two years. Then she came back home, got to work for the newspaper Nasha Niva as a journalist. In 2017, she moved to Belsat TV.[3]
Katsyaryna Andreeva with Ihar Ilyash wrote the book Belarusian Donbas in 2020.[3] The book is about how the Belarusian people and organizations take part in the war in Donbas for the Russian separatist forces side. The Belarusian regime deemed it to be extremist and in 2021, via court decision, banned the book and its content countrywide.[4]
Katsyaryna was first arrested in 2017 in Orsha.[5] On September 12, 2020, she was arrested by OMON for a live broadcast of a women's march in Minsk and was locked up for three days.[5]
At a Minsk court hearing led by the judge Natalia Buguk on February 18, 2021, Andreeva und Chultsova were sentenced to serve two years in prison for pushing 2020 Belarusian protests.[12][13] The public prosecutor was Alina Kasyanchyk, the investigator was Ihar Kurylovich.[14] On April 23, 2021, Minsk City Court declined an appeal on the sentence.[15]
In 2022, Andreeva was sentenced to additional eight years in prison on charges of "state treason", which Amnesty International called bogus.[1]
Reaction
On February 8, 2021, the US Embassy in Belarus made a statement, asking to make Chultsova and Andreeva free.[16]
In accordance with the decision of the Council of the European Union on June 21, 2021, judge Natalia Buguk was included in the list of people and organizations sanctioned in relation to human rights violations in Belarus for, among other things, “numerous politically motivated rulings against journalists and protesters, in particular the sentencing of Katsyaryna Bakhvalava (Andreyeva) and Darya Chultsova” and violations of rights of defence and to a fair trial.[14] By the same decision, the Assistant Prosecutor at the Frunzyenski District Court of Minsk Alina Kasyanchyk was included in the sanctions list.[14] She was held responsible, among other things, for prosecuting journalists for “recording peaceful protests, based on the groundless charges of ‛conspiracy’ and ‛violating public order.’”[14] Senior investigator of the Frunzyenski District Department of the Investigative Committee Ihar Kurylovich was put on the list too for, among other things, preparing a politically motivated criminal case against the journalists who recorded peaceful protests.[14]
Awards
On December 10, 2020, she was named Journalist of the Year (2020).[19][20][21]
On March 10, 2021, she got the Award named after Dariusz Fikus by the Press Club Polska.[22]
"[They are] strong in spirit, have no doubt in the right [of them], supported by friends, colleagues and the people that they do not know at all – such Katya and Dasha will be put in textbooks," Aksana Kolb, editor-in-chief of Novy Chas, wrote on the eve of their sentencing.[32]