CIVILIANS FACE REPRESSION FOR SHARING RUSSIAN TROOP MOVEMENTS
~ Nikita Ivansky ~
In September 2025, opposition media in Belarus estimated that one thousand
civilians —many unknown to to human rights defenders—have been prosecuted for
spreading intelligence about Russian troop movements on Telegram since the start
of Russia’s invasion of Ukraine in 2024.
Preparations for the invasion were made in Belarus under the guise of military
training. When Belarusians found themselves on the Kremlin’s side of the war,
there existed a partisan movement which sabotaged the railroad system to
paralyze troop movement, while a larger part of society joined the silent
resistance by taking pictures and videos of Russian military personnel at bases
or in transit. They sent these images and videos to different Telegram channels
to provide the Ukrainian resistance with crucial information on the movement of
aviation or rocket/drone launches, which often targeted civilian infrastructure
One of the biggest information gathering projects that emerged from this was
called Belarusian Hajun, a Telegram channel with a bot to where people could
send pictures directly. Within several weeks, the project exploded, with over
30,000 information points sent in the first 45 days of the invasion.
While the project was a huge open-source intelligence success in countering the
Russian war, the Belarusian state began hunting those providing such information
from the very beginning. Among them was antifascist Anna Pyshnik, who was
sentenced to three years in prison for sending pictures of the military on
Telegram. She served her whole term and was released in 2024, she had to leave
Belarus in fear of further political prosecution.
“When the war started, it was difficult to comprehend”, said Pyshnik after her
release. “The very next day, I heard something like an explosion; even our
building shook. I ran outside and saw a rocket trail. I decided to film it. You
just stand there and realise how close the war is, you realise how the
authorities are lying when they say that nothing will ever happen to Ukraine
from Belarusian territory. I understood that people needed to know what was
happening. So I sent the video I had filmed to independent media outlets. Two
days later, I filmed military helicopters over the city and sent that to the
media as well”.
At the beginning of 2025, the Belarusian secret police infiltrated a critical
Telegram chat on Belarusian Hajun, obtaining information on thousands of
accounts working for the project. Many of these accounts belonged to people
inside the country. Since then, a massive wave of repression has begun against
anyone who participated in the project by sending reports. At least 54 people
were prosecuted for helping the project under the charge of “aiding an extremist
organisation”.
The attack on the Belarusian Hajun project was made possible by an old link
found on the phone of someone arrested before February 2025. Created in 2022,
this link allowed them to join a closed chat containing critical information.
This is not the first time the KGB has managed to access closed chats and
collect information leading to more prosecutions.
The post Belarus’s informational partisans appeared first on Freedom News.