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With protest nowadays unthinkable in Belarus, Wikipedia remains a vital resource for Belarusians who value the truth

Online lifeline

An elderly woman attempts to reason with Belarusian riot police during a protest against the stolen presidential election in Minsk, Belarus, 20 September 2020. Photo: EPA-EFE

For many Belarusians, Wikipedia remains an essential source of uncensored information about their country, available thanks to the efforts of experienced contributors, many of whom continue to edit political content from outside the country due to the risk of persecution.

Indeed, the Belarusian authorities have come down very hard on certain veteran Wikipedians, as frequent contributors to the site are known. In one case, a court in Minsk sentenced Mark Bernshtein, one of Wikipedia’s top 50 Russian-speaking contributors, to three years of home confinement in 2022 for creating a Wikipedia page about the Russian invasion of Ukraine earlier that year.

Prior to Bernshtein’s arrest, Wikipedian Pavel Pernikau was imprisoned for two years after being found guilty of “discrediting” Belarus for adding a paragraph about the death of a protestor at the hands of the police to an article about the mass demonstrations against the stolen 2020 election, according to a report by human rights organisation Viasna.

Even Wikipedia recognises the gravity of the situation its contributors in Belarus now face, to the extent that they have overridden their own protocols and deleted the entire edit history for Belarus-related articles that could land its users in trouble.

Roman*, a Wikipedia contributor, says that the company’s list of its own potentially problematic articles was “unfortunately only increasing” as more and more topics become taboo or “extremist” in the eyes of authorities.

Though the Belarusian authorities have to date not announced any plans to block Wikipedia, should they decide to, they would need to block the entire website, much as China did in 2019, as simply making the Russian and Belarusian pages unavailable isn’t possible.

Preventing propaganda

One of Wikipedia’s fundamental principles is that all entries and articles should be presented in a neutral and impartial tone. For example, since Alexander Lukashenko was declared the winner of the clearly stolen 2020 presidential election, Belarusian Wikipedia has stopped referring to him as “the president of Belarus” and has started using “the self-proclaimed partially recognised president of Belarus”.

Alexander Lukashenko speaks to the crowd at a pro-Alexander Lukashenko demonstration in Minsk, 16 August 2020. Photo: Yauneh Yerchak / EPA

Alexander Lukashenko speaks to the crowd at a pro-Alexander Lukashenko demonstration in Minsk, 16 August 2020. Photo: Yauneh Yerchak / EPA

When deciding how best to describe controversial figures, Denis, another Wikipedia contributor, says that editors will meet to discuss the issue, and that while there are always those that seek to use more forceful or more delicate language, in most cases they can eventually all agree on the final phrasing to be used.

Once the wording is added, the article will be closed to further edits, and from then on only administrators can edit the page and anybody who wants to add further information will have to first submit suggested new content via Wikipedia’s administrative pages, which, if approved, will be added to the main article.

When editing Wikipedia articles, Wikipedians typically use reputable sources such as encyclopedias, reference books, and scientific articles to maintain “an objective picture of what is happening”, but according to Mikhail, an experienced Wikipedian himself, this is not always possible because such resources do not contain up-to-date information about current events.

What’s in a name?

Following a petition that was signed by some 82,000 people, the Russian-language Wikipedia article about Belarus has recently changed its spelling of the country’s own name from Belorussia to Belarus, a contentious move that was the subject of debate for over a decade before the change was finally implemented.

While Belarus has been the officially recognised name of the country since 1991, the term “Belorussia”, which though still widely used in Russian today, particularly by state media outlets, is definitely a throwback to Belarus’ Soviet past, when Belorussia was widely used as a shortened version of the Belarusian Soviet Socialist Republic.

Many Belarusian Wikipedians see their mission as maintaining free access to impartial information in Belarus, as well as information about Belarusian culture.

Making the decision about which of the two names to put first in the Russian-language article on Belarus, involved Wikipedians studying the frequency with which the competing terms were used by a number of reputable sources. When data on the subject was first collected in the 2010s, a decision was taken to keep using the term Belorussia in line with its greater popularity at the time. However, once Belarus overtook Belorussia in frequency in 2025, Wikipedia went ahead and made the change.

The change in language almost certainly reflects a wider societal shift and the fact that people nowadays see Belarus as an independent country in its own right, rather than somewhere intrinsically associated with Russia and living in its shadow. Interestingly, Mikhail notes that the Wikipedian discussions about changing the country’s name were mostly attended by people from other Soviet republics, many of whom face a similar difficulty with the nomenclature used for their own countries — Kyrgyzstan, for example, still being referred to as Kirghizia, a “Soviet” version of the officially recognised name, by Russian state media outlets.

Belarusian diaspora during a protest in Warsaw, 26 January 2025. Photo: Rafal Guz / EPA

Belarusian diaspora during a protest in Warsaw, 26 January 2025. Photo: Rafal Guz / EPA

Many Belarusian Wikipedians see their mission as maintaining free access to impartial information in Belarus, as well as information about Belarusian culture, which has traditionally only ever been published in obscure editions that are often inaccessible.

Viktor, another contributor who has edited Belarus-related articles on Wikipedia for nearly 10 years now, says that he cherishes the “free, neutral, balanced information” that the unique platform provides, and believes that it’s most important role is providing people with facts that “everyone can read and decide who to believe”.

*Names have been changed.

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