Baroque Monastery to Be Luxury Hotel - Or Returned to Catholics?
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BELARUS: from Raid to Ban in 12 Days
FORUM 18 NEWS SERVICE, Oslo, Norway http://www.forum18.org/ The right to believe, to worship and witness The right to change one's belief or religion The right to join together and express one's belief 15 June 2015 BELARUS: From raid to ban in 12 days By Felix Corley, Forum 18 News Service On 31 May police in Belarus with OMON riot police raided the Reformed Orthodox Transfiguration Church's meeting for Sunday worship, held in rented premises in Gomel. On 11 June officials banned the Church from renting premises, therefore banning it from meeting, church members told Forum 18 News Service. Police asked them: "Why do you attend this church and not a normal one?" Officials warned congregation leader Pastor Sergei Nikolaenko - who is already facing trial on Administrative Code charges - that he would be investigated on possible Criminal Code charges. "You can watch a football match or discuss [the poet Aleksandr] Pushkin without permission, but for a religious meeting you need permission", Dmitry Chumakov, the official in charge of religious affairs at Gomel Regional Executive Committee told Forum 18. Two weeks earlier there was a similar armed police raid on the Soligorsk congregation of Council of Churches Baptists. "11 more armed police arrived and broke up the service, as if they were coming after bandits", Forum 18 was told. Two congregation members were fined in early June for meeting for worship without state permission. On 31 May police in Belarus with OMON riot police raided the Reformed Orthodox Transfiguration Church's meeting for Sunday worship, held in rented premises in Gomel [Homyel] in the south east of the country. -
16 Belorussian
16 Belorussian Peter Mayo 1 Introduction Ethnically the Belorussians are the descendants of those ancient East Slavonic tribes - the Dregoviči, Radimiči and Krivici - which inhabited the territory between the rivers Pripjat' (Pripyat) and Western Dvina in the upper reaches of the Dnepr (Dnieper) and along the Sož (Sozh). When, in the middle of the thirteenth century, Russia fell under the Tatar yoke, there began a long period of political separation of what is now Belarus, until recently known as Belorussia, and the Ukraine. Between then and the end of the first quarter of the fourteenth century the principalities which lay on the territory of present-day Belarus were incorporated into the Grand Duchy of Lithuania; later, following the Union of Lublin (1569), they became part of the Polish-Lithuanian Commonwealth until re-unification with Russia in 1795. It was this period of separation that saw the break-up of Old Russian into three distinct East Slavonic languages: Belorussian, Ukrainian and Russian. A written language developed on Belorussian territory at an early stage. In the twelfth and thirteenth centuries the tradition of copying manuscripts was carried out in such centres as Polack (Polotsk) and Тигай (Turov), but the language of these was Church Slavonic. It was only from the fourteenth century that vernacular elements began to appear in texts of Belorussian provenance, while the establishment of Belorussian as a literary language belongs to the fifteenth and sixteenth centuries, when its status was greatly enhanced by its adoption as the official language of the Grand Duchy. During this period the orthographical and grammatical norms of Old Belorussian were established, despite a tendency to preserve traditional Church Slavonic-influenced forms, both in spelling and morphology. -
WFWP Biennial Report International Service Projects Overseas Volunteer Activities 2017-2018
WFWP Biennial Report International Service Projects Overseas Volunteer Activities 2017-2018 WOMEN’ S FEDERATION FOR WORLD PEACE WOMEN'S FEDERATION FOR WORLD PEACE, INTERNATIONAL UN ECOSOC/DPI/NGO General Consultative Status Department of International Service Projects / WFWP Japan National Headquarters Sansarra Higashiyama Suite 202, 3-1-11 Higashiyama, Meguro-ku, Tokyo 153-0043 JAPAN TEL:+81-3-5721-2579 FAX:+81-3-5721-2580 Email:[email protected] Website:https://wfwp.jp(Japanese) https://www.wfwp.org(English) UNDERSTANDING THE DIMENSIONS OF SUSTAINABLE DEVELOPMENT Five dimensions of Sustainable Development Goals(SDGs) POVERTY HUNGER HEALTH EDUCATION GENDER UNEQUALITY ENERGY SOCIAL WATER/ HYGIENE PARTNER- PEACE GROWTH/ SHIP EMPLOYMENT CLIMATE CHANGE SUSTAINABLE ENVIRON- Sustainable ECONOMIC INNOVATION MENTAL MARINE RESOURCES CITY LAND RESOURCES PRODUCTION/ CONSUMPTION By endorsing Agenda 2030 and its 17 goals, the world community has reaffirmed its commitment to Sustainable Development; to ensure sustained and inclusive economic growth, social inclusion and environmental protection and to do so in partnership and peace. Sustainable Development is usually viewed through a lens of three core elements: economic growth, social inclusion and environmental protection. But it’s important to remember that these are not just categories or boxes: they are connected and have aspects in common. To develop this approach a step further, two critical dimensions that will drive Agenda 2030 were adopted by member states: partnership and peace. Partnerships strengthen the capacities of all stakeholders to work together. Peace, justice and strong institutions are essential for improvements in the three core areas. Genuine sustainability sits at the center and it would be important to consider each of the SDGs through the lens of these five dimensions. -
New Records of Lichenicolous Fungi from the Gomel Region of Belarus
Folia Cryptog. Estonica, Fasc. 50: 67–71 (2013) http://dx.doi.org/10.12697/fce.2013.50.09, with additional specimen data New records of lichenicolous fungi from the Gomel Region of Belarus 1 2 1 Andrei Tsurykau , Ave Suija & Volha Khramchankova 1Department of Biology, F. Skorina Gomel State University, Sovetskaja st. 104, 246019 Gomel, Belarus. E-mail: [email protected], [email protected] 2Institute of Ecology and Earth Sciences, University of Tartu, 40 Lai st., 51005, Tartu, Estonia. E-mail: [email protected] Abstract: Three species of lichenicolous fungi, Roselliniella cladoniae, Taeniolella beschiana and Trichonectria rubefaciens, are reported for the first time for Belarus; two further species, lllosporiopsis christiansenii and Marchandiomyces aurantiacus, are new to Gomel Region, the south-eastern part of Belarus. INTRODUCTION Interest in lichenicolous fungi has been con- Chaenothecopsis epithallina and Clypeococcum stantly rising during the last decades (Lawrey hypocenomycis) have been identified in the & Diederich, 2011), but the information about Gomel region, south-eastern Belarus (Yurchen- the distribution and habitat preferences of ko & Golubkov, 2003; Golubkov, 2011a, 2011b; the species remains incomplete. In Belarus Tsurykau & Khramchankova, 2011). Herewith lichenicolous fungi are insufficiently known. we report five new species for the area, three of The first generalizing summary was published which are also new to Belarus. in 2011 (Golubkov, 2011a). This paper lists 21 species of lichenicolous fungi [Abrothallus MATERIAL AND METHODS caerulescens Kotte, A. peyritschii (Stein) Kotte, Athelia arachnoidea (Berk.) Jülich, Biatoropsis The specimens were collected mainly by the usnearum Räsänen, Chaenothecopsis epithal- first author during 2003–2012 (Fig. 1). Addi- lina Tibell, Clypeococcum hypocenomycis D. -
Geographic Structure of Road Transportation and Logistics Infrastructure in the Republic of Belarus
ISSN 1426-5915 e-ISSN 2543-859X 20(2)/2017 Prace Komisji Geografii Komunikacji PTG 2017, 20(2), 8-18 DOI 10.4467/2543859XPKG.17.007.7389 GeoGraPhic sTrucTure of road TransPorTaTion and loGisTics infrasTrucTure in The rePublic of belarus Struktura geograficzna infrastruktury transportu drogowego i logistyki w Republice Białorusi andrei bezruchonak Department of Economic Geography of Foreign Countries, Faculty of Geography, Belarusian State University, Leningradskaya st. 16, 220030, Minsk, Belarus e-mail: [email protected] citation: Bezruchonak A., 2017, Geographic structure of road transportation and logistics infrastructure in the Republic of Belarus, Prace Komisji Geografii Komunikacji PTG, 20(2), 8-18. abstract: Transportation, representing 6% of GDP, plays vital role in social and economic development of the Republic of Belarus. The purpose of this article is to present the geographic analysis of current spatial structure of the road transportation in Belarus in 2000-2014. The choice of transport mode for the article was influenced by several factors, such as historic devel- opment, network coverage, transformational changes in productivity, rapid increase in car ownership numbers, emergence of logistic centers and intelligent transportation systems. The article reviews the range of topics, including morphology of the major roads network, logistic centers spatial distribution and regional features of passenger and cargo productivity, discusses current transformational changes within the road transportation sector in Belarus. The key findings indicate that current changes in spatial structure of the road transportation in Belarus have uneven nature, shaped by social, economic, political and geopolitical external and internal factors and are a subject of interest for both transportation researchers and practitioners. -
8. Regions and Regional Planning
8. REGIONS AND REGIONAL PLANNING Spatial inequalities and regions at a glance The most sparsely populated area is Paliessie, which lies in the south. The only exceptions Whereas landscapes in Belarus change from within this area are the eastern and western gate- north to south (e.g. from the Belarusian Lakeland ways of Brest and Homieĺ, which are the admin- in the north to the Paliessie region in the south), istrative centres of the region. in terms of socio-economic development the Brest, which is the location of the largest country exhibits an east-west gradient as well border crossing in the west, is famous for its as regional differences that reflect centre-pe- fortress. The Bielaviežskaja Pušča National Park riphery disparities. Some of these inequalities near Brest is a World Heritage Nature Reserve. It can be traced back to the period when the coun- received this status as Europe’s largest primeval try’s western regions formed a part of Poland forest. The pride of the park is its population of (Kireenko, E.G. 2003). The east-west dichotomy bison. Brest is also renowned as the site of sever- is also apparent in the more industrialized nature al major historical treaties and events (the Brest of the eastern regions (Ioffe, G. 2004, 2006) and Union of 1596, the Treaty of Brest-Litovsk of 1918, the richer cultural and architectural heritage of the defence of the Brest Fortress in 1941, and the western areas with their more favourable demo- graphics. Nevertheless, these differences are far less profound than those seen in Ukraine. -
The Ukrainian Weekly 2007, No.17
www.ukrweekly.com INSIDE: • Scholars comment on Ukraine’s constitutional crisis — page 3. • European soccer championships can unite Ukraine — page 4. • Spanish documentary “La Zona” about Chornobyl— page 9. HE KRAINIAN EEKLY T PublishedU by the Ukrainian National Association Inc., a fraternal non-profitW association Vol. LXXV No. 17 THE UKRAINIAN WEEKLY SUNDAY, APRIL 29, 2007 $1/$2 in Ukraine Yushchenko unveils Chornobyl monument Yushchenko re-dismisses Rada, Press Office of Ukraine’s President on Wednesday, April 25, to unveil a mon- schedules elections for June 24 ument to the victims of the Chornobyl BILA TSERKVA, Ukraine – President disaster called The Chornobyl Bell. In a by Zenon Zawada “Undoubtedly, this decree just as the prior Viktor Yushchenko visited Bila Tserkva speech during the ceremony, he said it Kyiv Press Bureau one greatly surprised me, because it violated was incumbent on the government to all our reached agreements in regard to rela- KYIV – Coalition parliamentary tions between branches of government, and “adequately react” to the aftereffects of deputies initiated impeachment proceed- the world’s worst nuclear catastrophe. between men,” Mr. Yanukovych said. “This ings against President Viktor Yushchenko kind of thing isn’t done.” He noted that Ukraine had spent after he issued a second presidential decree more money on the issue in the past Speaking from the chairman’s tribune on April 25 that canceled his first dismissal in a Parliament that continues to ignore three years than in the decade before. decree in order to re-dismiss the Verkhovna “However, this response is not full, for the president’s dismissal decrees, Mr. -
Parish to "Lose Nothing" When Veteran Priest Expelled?
FORUM 18 NEWS SERVICE, Oslo, Norway http://www.forum18.org/ The right to believe, to worship and witness The right to change one's belief or religion The right to join together and express one's belief This article was published by F18News on: 7 December 2007 BELARUS: Parish to "lose nothing" when veteran priest expelled? By Geraldine Fagan, Forum 18 News Service <http://www.forum18.org> A religious affairs official in the south-eastern region of Gomel is dismissive of the rights of the parishioners of Holy Trinity Catholic Church in the town of Rechytsa. He claimed to Forum 18 News Service that they will "lose nothing" when their veteran parish priest, Polish citizen Fr Grzegorz Chudek, is forced to leave Belarus. The priest was ordered to leave by 1 December, but his visa has now been extended by two months. During this period he is "of course" not permitted to work in his parish, the official said. He repeatedly refused to tell Forum 18 how Fr Chudek had broken the law. "No one has told me if or when he might have to leave, let alone why," Cardinal Kazimierz Swiatek told Forum 18. But Fr Chudek appears not to have had his annual visa renewed due to his description of social malaise in Belarus given to a Polish newspaper earlier in 2007. More than 700 local Catholics have appealed to President Aleksandr Lukashenko for the decision to be withdrawn. Foreign religious workers invited by local religious communities are under tight state control and need permission specifying where they will work. -
Gomel Street
Gomel Street Map Page 1: Map (pictures exist for red shaded streets and outlined sites) Page 2: Site Legend (Russian) Page 3: Site Legend (English) Pages 4: Street Legend (English) 55 56 4 57 58 59 60 61 62 63 64 65 66 67 68 69 Gomel Site Legend 1 New [Christian] Orthodox cemetery 26 Outdoors Bathing Facilities 50 St. Elijah Church 2 New Jewish Cemetery 27 Trinity Church 51 Old Believers House for Prayers 3 Classification Yard of Libava - Romny 28 Jewish Synagogue 52 Old Believers Cemetery Railroad 4 Shevelev's Cooking Oil Extraction 29 Russia Asia Bank 53 Levitin's Sawmill Plant Plant 5 Dubinsky's Cast Iron Casting Plant 30 Girls High School (or Women's 54 Police Board Gymnasium) 6 Lekert Brewery 31 Seminary 55 Burnt Swamp/Bog 7 Nikol'sky Railroad church 32 Grocery Store 56 Smithies (i.e. Blacksmiths or metal works) 8 Agraskin's Cast Iron Casting Plant 33 Latorio's Bath Houses 57 Military Stores 9 Prison 34 Summer Public Assembly 58 Railroad Station (outdoors) 10 Military Prison 35 Water Works Station 59 ? repair shop 11 Military Church 36a Town Hall/Town Government 60 Swamp 12 Barracks of the Department of 36b Hotel (Inn) 61 Market Square Engineering 13 Municipal barracks 37 Town Fire Station 62 Ravine 14 Fire track ? and theatre 38 Roman-Catholic Church 63 Prince Paskevich Park 15 Municipal school 39 Tsar-Liberator Memorial Chapel 64 River Sozh 16 town hospital 40 St. Peter and Paul Cathedral 65 Ship docks 17 Alexander’s Boys Gymnasium 41 Princess Paskevich's castle 66 Chernigov Turnpike 18 parochial school with professional 42 Uyezd -
Preliminary Monitoring of Human Rights Center “Viasna” Concerning Tortures and Facts of Other Kinds of Inhumane Treatment Towards Citizens of Belarus
REVIEW-CHRONICLE OF THE HUMAN RIGHTS VIOLATIONS IN BELARUS IN 2004 2 REVIEW-CHRONICLE OF THE HUMAN RIGHTS VIOLATIONS IN BELARUS IN 2004 PREAMBLE: CONCLUSIONS AND GENERALIZATIONS In 2004 the political situation in Belarus was distinguished by further worsening of the situation of human rights and the relations between the state and individuals. Regular and deliberate human rights violations became a necessary condition for the strengthening of the unlimited dictatorial power – infringements of human rights served as the funda¬ment for authoritarianism and were a favorable environment for the development of totalitarianism. One of the main factors that influenced the public and political situation in Belarus in 2004 was the Parliamentary election and the nationwide referendum concerning the possibility to prolong Aliaksandr Luka¬shenka’s presidential powers. The need for the liquidation of the cons¬ti¬tutional restriction of the number of possible presidential terms defined the state policy and influenced it in all circles of public life. This factor ma¬nifested in the sphere of human rights with the aggravation of the rep¬ressions against political opponents and prosecution of opposition-mindedness, enforcement of new discriminative legal acts, further limitation of the freedom of the press, violation of the liberty of peaceful assemblies and associations and other obstacles for the enjoyment of personal liberties by citizens of Belarus. Citizens of Belarus were deprived of the right to take part in the state government with the assistance of elected representatives. The election to the Chamber of Representatives wasn’t free and democratic. It was conducted according to the scenario that was prepared by the authorities in complete conformity with the “wishes” A. -
Assessment of the Tourist Potential of the Belarusian Polesie
FRANKFURT ZOOLOGICAL SOCIETY NON-GOVERNMENT ORGANIZATION “BAHNA” ASSESSMENT OF THE TOURIST POTENTIAL OF THE BELARUSIAN POLESIE Prepared in accordance with contract No. FZS-1 dated 01 July, 2020 Minsk, 2020 CONTENTS Introduction……………………………………………………………………………….. 3 Basic terms and definitions …………………………………………………………….. 4 I The state of agro- and ecotourism in Belarus and in the Polesie region…………. 5 1. Agro-ecotourism …………………………………………………………………. 5 2. Ecotourism ……………………………………………………………………….. 7 2.1. Ecotourism based on protected areas ……………………………….. 7 2.2. Ecotourism based on the forest fund …………………………………. 9 3. Water tourism ……………………………………………………………………. 13 II Conditions for tourism business …………………………………………………….. 14 1. General legal conditions …………………..................................................... 14 2. Conditions for issuing loans for agro-estates ………………………………… 14 3. Results of a survey of agro-ecotourism entities in Polesie …………………. 16 III Tourism Economics …………………………………………………………………. 18 IV Rural tourism and ecotourism in the EU ………………………………………….. 24 Conclusions ……………………………………………………………………………… 26 Recommendations ……………………………………………………………………… 29 2 INTRODUCTION Belarus is a country with significant and largely underestimated tourism potential, including for the development of ecotourism. Whereas Polesie is one of the regions with a rich natural and cultural heritage. It is undoubtedly important to preserve this heritage in the most natural state and at the same time use its potential for the purposes of sustainable development of the region, where about 2 million people live, as well as for the growth of the economy of the entire country. In this study, we focus on economic aspects in order to assess the current state of tourism in rural areas, as well as tourism based on the sustainable use of natural potential (ecotourism). Among our tasks is a primary assessment of the efficiency and prospects of investments in this sector, determination of its potential for achieving the goals of socio- economic development. -
Belarus Page 1 of 9
Belarus Page 1 of 9 Belarus International Religious Freedom Report 2008 Released by the Bureau of Democracy, Human Rights, and Labor The Constitution provides for freedom of religion; however, the Government restricted this right in practice. The Government continued to restrict religious freedom in accordance with the provisions of a 2002 law on religion and a 2003 concordat with the Belarusian Orthodox Church (BOC), a branch of the Russian Orthodox Church (ROC) and the only officially recognized Orthodox denomination. Although there is no state religion, the concordat grants the BOC privileged status. Protestants in particular attracted negative attention. Authorities kept many religious communities waiting as long as several years for decisions about registration or property restitution. Authorities harassed and fined members of certain religious groups, especially those regarded as bearers of foreign cultural influence or as having a political agenda. Foreign missionaries, clergy, and humanitarian workers affiliated with churches faced many government-imposed obstacles, including deportation and visa refusal or cancellation. Restrictions on foreign clergy increased during the reporting period. While some members of society took positive actions to promote religious freedom, instances of societal abuses and discrimination occurred, including numerous acts of vandalism and arson of religious sites, buildings, and memorials. The U.S. Government discusses religious freedom with the Government as part of its overall policy to promote human rights. Section I. Religious Demography The country has an area of 80,154 square miles and a population of 9.7 million. Historically it has been an area of both interaction and conflict between Belarusian Orthodoxy and Roman Catholicism, although relations between the two groups improved during the period covered by this report.