Photographer facing criminal charge over teddy bear stunt
The Committee for State Security (KGB) has extended to 10 days the detention of young photographer Anton Surapin, who is formally suspected of helping foreigners illegally enter Belarus.
If charged and found guilty, Mr. Surapin may get up to seven years in
prison, Andrey Bastunets, deputy chairman of the Belarusian Association
of Journalists, told BelaPAN.
Mr.
Surapin, a 20-year-old student at Belarusian State University's
Journalism Institute, was detained on July 13 for 72 hours over pictures
of “pro-free speech” teddy bears that were allegedly dropped on Belarus
from a plane piloted by representatives of Swedish public relations
firm Studio Total on July 4.
The KGB has instituted criminal proceedings in connection with the incident.
According
to Mr. Bastunets, Mr. Surapin was interrogated for the first time only
on July 16. The man's parents have already hired a lawyer for the son.
The
news site Belarusian News Photos, founded by Mr. Surapin, ran the
photos of the teddy bears with miniature placards lying on the grass
hours after the alleged drop. In his comments, Mr. Surapin said that he
had received them from an anonymous author living outside Minsk
On
July 4, Studio Total, known for high-profile and sometimes deceptive
publicity stunts, claimed that it had dropped hundreds of teddy bears
holding miniature signs “We support the Belarusian struggle for free
speech” on Belarus in a show of support for the country's pro-democracy
movement.
It released videos, which it said prove that the stunt took place.
The
Belarusian defense ministry initially denied that any aircraft had
invaded the country's airspace on that day and described the videos as a
crude fake of “a clearly provocative nature.”