Saša Filipienka, Irvin Welsh, Hunter S. Thompson among books banned by censors in Belarus

September 30, Pozirk. The Ministry of Information’s censorship commission has added 32 titles to the list of banned books, including Elephant and Red Cross by popular exiled Belarusian writer Saša Filipienka, nearly all books by Irvin Welsh and Hunter S. Thompson’s Fear and Loathing in Las Vegas.
After the 2020 political unrest in Belarus, Filipienka has become a voice of the Belarusian protest movement in Europe, where he resides. He has advocated for Belarusian political prisoners in the Russian, German, English, Swedish, Dutch, Polish and French press. The writer supports Ukraine in its fight against Russian invasion.
The list now also features the children’s bestseller Duck, Death and the Tulip by German author Wolf Erlbruch, as well as The Story of the Little Mole Who Knew It Was None of His Business, written in collaboration with Werner Holzwarth.
In 2017, Erlbruch won the Astrid Lindgren Memorial Award, one of the most prestigious in children’s literature. He also received the Hans Christian Andersen Medal for outstanding contribution to children’s literature.
Books by Irvine Welsh, a Scottish writer known for his raw, blunt style and Edinburgh working-class dialect, explore the dark sides of life, such as drugs, violence, sex and the social problems of modern youth.
Welsh’s blacklisted 1993 cult novel Trainspotting, which follows the lives of a group of heroin-addicted friends in Edinburgh, was on the BBC’s 2003 “Big Read” list of the UK’s top 200 novels. Welsh is reportedly planning to publish a sequel soon.
The Ministry of Information noted that officials have the right to revoke the certificate of state registration from any distributor found to be spreading the blacklisted books.
Belarus has banned 173 books so far.
Also read: Belarusian MP Ananič claims West waging “mental war” against Belarus
- Politics
- PoliticsCichanoŭskaja, Estonian speaker discuss sanctions, support for Belarusian youthThe material is available only to POZIRK+
- EconomyBelarus sharply raises price of excise stamps for liquorThe material is available only to POZIRK+
- Politics, SportWorld Boxing approves tough competition entry rules for neutral Belarusian athletesThe material is available only to POZIRK+
- EconomyŁukašenka invites Kazakh president to visit BelarusThe material is available only to POZIRK+
- PoliticsCoale hoping to secure release of more prisonersThe material is available only to POZIRK+
- Politics, SecurityRussia-led military bloc pledges commitment to non-proliferation treatyThe material is available only to POZIRK+
- Economy
- PoliticsOpposition politician: Pačobut’s release was prisoner swap not Minsk’s goodwillThe material is available only to POZIRK+
- Politics, SecurityKyiv sees no military threats near shared border with BelarusThe material is available only to POZIRK+
- Politics, SocietyBelarus' western neighbors report over 2,000 irregular crossings in AprilThe material is available only to POZIRK+
- Society
- PoliticsReprisals: former prisoners charged over interviewsThe material is available only to POZIRK+
- Politics
- Politics, Society
- PoliticsCichanoŭskaja discusses “support for Belarusians in Lithuania” with NausėdaThe material is available only to POZIRK+
- PoliticsFormer Foreign Minister Alejnik appointed as national SDG coordinatorThe material is available only to POZIRK+
- PoliticsMinsk releases journalist Pačobut, others in five-for-five exchangeThe material is available only to POZIRK+
- PoliticsCichanoŭskaja’s aide meets with EHU board chair after Belarus brands it “extremist”The material is available only to POZIRK+
- PoliticsSecretary general of CoE congress of local authorities welcomes elections for opposition Coordination CouncilThe material is available only to POZIRK+



