In March of this year, posters appeared in the Warsaw metro:
"In Poland, your comment on Facebook is a contribution to the discussion.
In Belarus, you can go to prison"
"Learning a foreign language in Poland is your development.
10 schools and Polish language courses were closed in Belarus"
"In Poland, your charitable donations are help to those who need it.
In Belarus, there is an opportunity to start investigative actions"
The posters contrast everyday situations in Poland and Belarus, show how limited freedom of speech is in Belarus.
Posters about Belarus in the Warsaw metro and in other public places.
The action was initiated by the Representation for National Revival of the United Transitional Cabinet with the permission of the Warsaw authorities.
It is timed to Freedom Day.
Posters about Belarus in the Warsaw metro and in other public places.
The posters will hang in the subway for two weeks.
Relevant images are also placed on city advertising banners, buses, and ground public transport stops.
Posters about Belarus in the Warsaw metro and in other public places.
This is not the first time that posters about the Belarusian agenda appear in public places in Warsaw.
Similar information campaigns have been held in Poland for the past few years before Freedom Day.
As the representative of the United Transitional Cabinet in National Revival Alina Kovshik told Svaboda, such an action has already become traditional.
Warsaw authorities treat her well.
"It was our idea.
The concept is to bring the Poles closer to understanding what is happening in our country, so that they do not forget about Belarus, because at the everyday level, Belarus is lost, Belarus is forgotten," said Alina Kovshik.
She added that they would like the company to expand to other cities in Poland.
"We are ready to share these posters if other Belarusian communities from Poland contact us, if they can display them in their own cities," said the initiator of the campaign.