When: Thursday, 22. March 2012 08:30 – 16:00
To: Thursday, 22. March 2012
Where: Oslo, Norway, House of Literature
Host: Human Rights House Foundation, Norwegian Helsinki Committee and Norwegian PEN
Contact: Amund Trellevik (amund.trellevik@humanrightshouse.org / +47 41440565)

More than a year has passed since the violent crackdown on protesters on 19 December 2010 in Minsk. Since then, the human rights situation in Belarus has continued to spiral downwards. Political opposition leaders Andrei Sannikov, Mikhail Statkevich and several others remain imprisoned. Human rights organizations and independent media are being harassed. The leading human rights defender Ales Bialiatski has been convicted to a long prison sentence. The European Union takes the lead on action against Belarus, and has imposed sanctions like ban on visa for more than 200 officials and limitations on trade with companies close to the President. Still, there are no signs that President Alexander Lukashenko is planning to unclench his iron fist. Instead, the crisis in the relationship between Belarus and Europe has deepened, and at the same time the doubt about Belarus’ ability to save its’ internal economy becomes stronger.

Is the pursued policy efficient? Is Norway’s policy towards Belarus clear enough? How can we offer more support to freedom-longing Belarusians? And is the Belarusian people ready for a change?

Agenda

08.30-09.00 09.00-09.05

Part 1:

Coffee, registration

Welcome from the organizers

Speaker: William Nygaard, Norwegian PEN board member

Understanding Belarus

Moderator: Per Anders Todal, writer 09.05-11:00

Keynote speech:

Thorbjørn Jagland, Secretary General, Council of Europe

Facts on the ground – four voices from Belarus

Adam Globus, writer Yury Zisser, owner of the Belarusian online resource www.tut.by Tatsiana Reviaka, Human Rights Centre Viasna Natallia Radzina, journalist, www.Charter 97.org

International challenges – Europe

11.00-11.40

Part 2:

Andres Herkel, Special Rapporteur on Belarus, Council of Europe Parliamentary Assembly

International challenges – the Nordic countries

Dagfinn Høybråthen, MP – Christian Democratic Party, Nordic Council of Ministries

Questions from the floor

Lunch

A «standup-lunch» with sandwiches, coffee/tea and soft drinks will be served at the venue.

The solutions

Moderator: Per Dalgaard

Looking at the different angles

14.15-15.45

From the Norwegian government

Torgeir Larsen, State Secretary of Foreign Affairs

From the Norwegian Parliament and political opposition

Ine Marie Eriksen Søreide, MP , the Conservative Party, chair of the Parliament’s Standing Committee on Foreign Affairs and Defense, Norway

From the young politicians of Belarus

Andrej Kim, blogger and youth activist

Q&A From the Human Rights perspective

Anna Gerasimova, director, the Belarusian Human Rights House in exile, Vilnius

From the OSCE-perspective Speaker: TBA

From the EU-perspective

Erika Ellamaa-Ots, Deputy Chair of the EU Eastern European and Central Asia Working Group, EEAS

From the Russian perspective

Pavel Sheremet, journalist Break. Fresh fruit and drinks will be served.

The financial perspective – an introduction to the panel discussion

Ales Mihalevich, independent presidential candidate from 2010

The way ahead – a panel discussion

A. Herkel, Natallia Radzina or Tatsiana Reviaka, OSCE and EU (TBA).

Questions from the floor

15.45-16:00 Summing up Speaker: Bjørn Engesland, Secretary General, Norwegian Helsinki Committee

The Conference will projected live on web-cast on the following web-sites: www.nhc.no; www.humanrightshouse.org and www.pen.no


Practical information:

The conference languages are English – Russian – Norwegian with simultaneous translation. There is no conference fee, but all participants need to register at pen@norskpen.no no later than

20th March.

The conference is organized and hosted by the Human Rights House Foundation (HRHF), the Norwegian Helsinki Committee (NHC) and Norwegian PEN, supported by the Norwegian Union of Journalists, the Norwegian Publishers Association and the Norwegian Non-fiction Writers And Translators Association (NFF) in cooperation and with financial support from the Norwegian Ministry of Foreign Affairs, the Freedom of Expression Foundation (Fritt Ord) and the Norwegian Association of Media Organizations.