“With church communities required to re-register, all are vulnerable to new restrictions,” explained Natallia Vasilevich, coordinator of the ecumenical Christian Vision organization, referencing a recent law that requires all parishes to reapply for legal status and restricts educational and missionary activity.
“Priests can be arrested and see their parishes deprived of legal status, if they post or share anything deemed extremist. This is why they’ve been asked by their bishops to cease social media activity.”
She spoke as two more senior clergy faced charges of distributing “extremist material” under Article 19:11 of Belarus’s Code of Administrative Offenses.
Vasilevich said official monitoring agencies had checked social media records as part of an independent media purge, often keeping screenshots, forcing many priests to close their accounts rather than spend time editing them. Catholic clergy were also impeded from discussing “personal and confessional problems” with parishioners, knowing their private telephone messages could be checked by police.
More than 365 million believers in Christ worldwide suffer high levels of persecution and discrimination, according to a 2024 report by the advocacy group Open Doors. Belarus was placed on the 2024 World Watch List by Open Doors for the second time since 2023.
The pontifical charity Aid to the Church in Need said in its country overview, “Most human rights, including religious freedom, are endangered due to the authoritarian nature of the government in Belarus.”
A prominent lay Catholic confirmed that clergy had been warned not to criticize officials in Belarus, where the disputed August 2020 reelection of Alexander Lukashenko for his sixth term as president was followed by harsh repression and international sanctions.
“Sanctioning protests or questioning state actions in maintaining public order — all of this, it’s been made clear, is subject to checking,” said Artiom Tkaczuk, a social worker now living in neighbouring Poland.
In an Oct. 31 report, Christian Vision said 36 Roman and Greek Catholic clergy had been “subjected to ... persecution for political reasons” since 2020, alongside 21 Orthodox and 29 Protestant pastors.
Two Catholic priests have been recognized as political prisoners by the Belarusan rights group Viasna. Oblate Father Andrzej Juchniewicz, chairman of Major Superiors, Delegates and Representatives of Institutes and Societies of Apostolic Life in Belarus, has been detained since May 8 in connection with “actions on the internet.” Meanwhile, 70-year-old Fr. Henrykh Akalatovich was detained in November 2023 for “treason against the state,” and has since suffered a heart attack and undergone gastric cancer surgery.
The Catholic Church makes up a 10th of the 9.4 million inhabitants of Belarus, a former Soviet republic, where 1,287 political prisoners are incarcerated as of Nov. 11, including Viasna’s founder, Ales Bialiatski, who won the 2022 Nobel Peace Prize.
Under the new Freedom of Conscience and Religious Organizations law, signed in December 2023 by Lukashenko, educational and missionary activity by churches is restricted, while all parishes must re-register by July 2025 or face liquidation, and fears of new church restrictions follow the departure after a Sept. 15 farewell Mass of the Vatican’s Croatian nuncio, Archbishop Ante Jozic.
Vasilevich added that Catholic priests now languishing in jail were only “a few examples of many suffering people,” adding that she counted on the international community to continue “sending strong messages daily” to Lukashenko’s government, demanding an end to repression.