Gennady Davydko


Gennady Davydko is a Belarusian politician and TV propagandist, included in the sanctions list of the European Union in 2011 - 2016.

Biography

Gennady Davydko was born in Sianno, Byelorussian Soviet Socialist Republic.
He grew up in the Russian Far East. He graduated from the Far Eastern Pedagogical Institute of Arts in Vladivostok, Russia as a drama producer, and from the Belarusian State Academy of Arts. He started his career at the Maxim Gorky Drama Theatre in Orenburg, Russia.
After military service, he worked as an actor in the Vincent Dunin-Marcinkievich Drama and Comedy Theatre in Mahiliou.
In 1981 Davydko became an actor at the Yanka Kupala National Academic Theatre in Minsk. In 1997 later became the theatre's director. During his career, Davydko played minor roles in several Russian and Belarusian movies.
From 2004 till 2012 Davydko was member of the lower house of the parliament of Belarus. The parliamentary elections of 2004 and 2008 were not recognized as free and fair by the OSCE, the United States and the European Union.
Davydko is also an advisor on cultural issues and co-chair of the Listapad Film Festival.
Since December 28, 2010 Davydko is chairman of the National State Television and Radio Company of the Republic of Belarus. As head of the state television, Davydko personally read the background text in a widely known propaganda film denigrating the democratic opposition. In 2014 he was the head of professional jury who selected the artists and songs for national selection of an entrant to Eurovision Song Contest 2014.
In January 2018 he was elected the head of Belarusian public association Belaya Rus.

Accusations, EU sanctions

In 2011, after the wave of repressions that followed the 2010 presidential election in Belarus, Davydko and several other top managers and employees of major state media became subject to an EU travel ban and asset freeze as part of a sanctions list of 208 individuals responsible for political repressions, electoral fraud and propaganda. The sanctions were lifted in 2016.
According to the EU Council's decision, Gennady Davydko was "responsible for promoting state propaganda on TV, propaganda which supported and justified the repression of the democratic opposition and of civil society after the elections in December 2010. Democratic opposition and civil society are systematically highlighted in a negative and derogatory way using falsified information."