Stories

Stories and reportages about life in Belarus

Month (without) pride / sample photo by Euroradio
Month (without) pride / sample photo by Euroradio
The stories of three queer people. How has their sense of security changed lately?
"My kitty stayed at home because he's a boy" / Euroradio/Hromadske
"My kitty stayed at home because he's a boy" / Euroradio/Hromadske
"Girls, I want to go home so bad."
Do the 30-year-olds feel nostalgic about the USSR? / collage by Ulad Rubanau, Euroradio
Do the 30-year-olds feel nostalgic about the USSR? / collage by Ulad Rubanau, Euroradio
Some want to go back to the Soviet times. Others want eradication of the USSR legacy as quickly as possible.
Viktar Hanchar and Anatoly Krasouski​
Viktar Hanchar and Anatoly Krasouski​
President Lukashenka's first term was coming to an end. The opposition insisted on new elections. Lukashenka resisted them.
Hajnowka is just over 20 kilometers away from the border with Belarus / Euroradio
Hajnowka is just over 20 kilometers away from the border with Belarus / Euroradio
While locals remain indifferent to politics, they fear migrants from across the border with Belarus for various reasons.
Sisters Yulia and Hanna Mikhailau / TUT.by / home archive
Sisters Yulia and Hanna Mikhailau / TUT.by / home archive
The girl talks about her seven brothers and sisters and discusses the situation in Belarus.
Belarus has a complicated relationship with the digital world / Euroradio​
Belarus has a complicated relationship with the digital world / Euroradio​
Belarusians have matured as a nation, but big digital corporations still treat them without respect.
People detained at the protests walk out of the detention center on Akrestsina street on August 14, 2020 / Vasily Fedosenko / Reuters
People detained at the protests walk out of the detention center on Akrestsina street on August 14, 2020 / Vasily Fedosenko / Reuters
The story of Nadzeya who went through hell at the Akrestsina detention center in Minsk after the Aug. 9 elections.
Alexander Lukashenko, Boris Yeltsin, and Vladimir Putin in 1999 / Reuters
Alexander Lukashenko, Boris Yeltsin, and Vladimir Putin in 1999 / Reuters
How Minsk and Moscow planned to become closer but fell out with each other once again.