Alexey Shuntov - Strike, exile, arrest: what happened to Belarusian workers?

Mediazona, a media outlet focusing on law and justice, spoke with workers at three different enterprises who took part in last year’s protests to find out how they happened. As part of our coverage of Belarus, openDemocracy has translated and republished this article with permission here.    Alexey Karlyuk, 35, is from the town of Salihorsk, where he has worked as an electrical fitter at the state-owned potash company, Belaruskali, since 2006. On 9 August, he went to vote and at 10pm headed to the mine for the night shift.

“When we get off work, we will be living in a different country,” he remembers his colleagues joking. But when Karlyuk’s shift ended at 7am the next morning, he found the news “was not at all rosy”. “It was hard to believe the numbers that were there,” he said. …

'Resign!': Alexander Lukashenko heckled by factory workers in Minsk // 'We will win': vast Belarus rally adamant Lukashenko must go

Salute the spirit of resistance to tyranny - 'We can only help ourselves': women in Belarus take protests into their own hands

Book review: Nothing Is True and Everything Is Possible by Peter Pomerantsev - Putinism and the oil-boom years

Book review: Peter Pomerantsev's 'This Is Not Propaganda' is quietly frightening. By Steve Bloomfield

Andrew Roth - The problem is Putin: protesters throng Russia's streets to support jailed Navalny // Russia’s courageous historic protests against Putinism

Navalny’s new YouTube video sensation: Putin’s secret palace, and “the biggest bribe in history”.

STANISLAV MARKELOV - Patriotism as a diagnosis

Vasili Arkhipov, the man who stopped nuclear war


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