Larisa Shchiryakova

Larisa Shchiryakova (Belarusian: Лариса Щирякова) is a Belarusian journalist who freelances for Belsat.

Career

Shchiryakova has been implementing European Commission civil society projects in Belarus since 2009. She worked with a youth group, Talaka, to create and disseminate communally-oriented videos in Gomel city.[1] Despite the apolitical nature of her work [?], government authorities have targeted her in a larger campaign of press censorship. Police detained her along with 34 others on 13 July 2011 for her reporting.[2] In August 2012, police detained Schiryakova and three others after they tried to videotape a cultural festival.[3] On 22 October 2012, the regional prosecutor's office summoned her on suspicion of working for a foreign media outlet without government accreditation. The summons followed Shchiryakova's public comments criticizing the state's treatment of Viasna Human Rights Centre personnel.[4] The State Security Committee (KGB) detained her in December 2014.[5] In January 2015, Shchiryakova and Konstantin Zhukovsky were fined 900,000 rubles for participating in a picket in Svietlahorsk, which they had covered in the media. On 8 March 2015, she was brought before police authorities again for illegally interviewing businessmen on camera, asking about the effects of new taxes on entrepreneurs.[6] She was fined $3.6 million rubles on 12 March.[7] Gomel City Court found her guilty of violating Article 22.9 of the Criminal Code, "illegal dissemination of media products," on 13 January 2016. She was fined $250.[8]

gollark: All my phones have suffered damage of some kind to non-core parts, because apparently the computer bits are extremely reliable.
gollark: You would need an ESP32 *and* screen thing *and* 4G modem.
gollark: Macron cannot do any operation on integers except 3n+1 and n/2.
gollark: The South-East Tunisian UN.
gollark: <@738361430763372703> The Pinebook Pro is meant to deliver solid day-to-day Linux or \*BSD experience and to be a compelling alternative to mid-ranged Chromebooks that people convert into Linux laptops. In contrast to most mid-ranged Chromebooks however, the Pinebook Pro comes with an IPS 1080p 14″ LCD panel, a premium magnesium alloy shell, 64/128GB of eMMC storage* (more on this later – see asterisk below), a 10,000 mAh capacity battery and the modularity / hackability that only an open source project can deliver – such as the unpopulated PCIe m.2 NVMe slot (an optional feature which requires an optional adapter). The USB-C port on the Pinebook Pro, apart from being able to transmit data and charge the unit, is also capable of digital video output up-to 4K at 60hz.

References


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