On 27 February, journalist Mykhailo Tkach, working from news portal Ukrainska Pravda along with his cameraman Yaroslav Bondarenko, were among the first journalists to be detained while reporting on the transit of goods between Poland, Russia, and Belarus. That day, ten agents began searching the journalist's car, seizing phones, confidential documents and damaging memory cards from the cameras.
"It was clear that the Polish special services representatives were scared. They started asking me who else knew, whether the Ukrainian authorities and the Ukrainian government knew. They asked us who our sources were, how we had found out about it and how long we had been working on it", said Tkach, who was held for at least four hours before being released after the intervention of the Embassy of Ukraine in Poland. Throughout their detention, the journalists were not permitted to contact anyone. The Polish police denied having detained the journalists.
On 7 March, a similar incident occurred with the editor of the news agency Rayon.in.ua. Yury Konkevych and his cameraman Oleksandr Pilyuk were also detained by six police officers in Braniewo city for investigating cargo transportation. The car and their working and personal equipment have been confiscated as well. According to the journalists, the officers even deleted some recorded evidence and refused the journalistsʼ request to contact the consul, editorial staff or relatives.
The hostility escalated further when Yuriy Konkevych and Oleksandr Pilyuk were banned from entering Schengen zone countries for five years. They returned to Ukraine at night on 9 March. The editorial office of Rayon.in.ua has started the process of appealing the deportation, in addition to seeking the return of their confiscated equipment.
“The fact that Polish law enforcement officers ignore the status of journalists and detain and search media workers is infuriating,” said the president of the IFJ-EFJ affiliated National Union of Journalists of Ukraine (NUJU), Sergiy Tomilenko.
The IFJ and the EFJ are alarmed by such persistent obstruction of the work of Ukrainian journalists in Poland that poses serious threats to the safety of journalists and the press freedom itself. Additionally, the federations call upon Polish authorities to take immediate steps to protect the journalists, including the cancellation of the deportation of Yury Konkevych and Oleksandr Pilyuk.