Belarusian authorities have targeted several of the largest global crypto exchanges, making them unavailable in the country.
The decision to prevent Belarusians from using their services comes from the Ministry of Information, local and regional media revealed.
The websites of several of the world’s top crypto trading venues have been added to a Belarusian list of restricted internet resources.
The latter is maintained by BelGIE, a government body serving as the country’s watchdog overseeing the telecommunications sector.
The measure is affecting some of the most popular exchanges in the global crypto space, including Bybit, Bitget, and OKX, the Onliner.by outlet informed, quoted by the Russian business news portal RBC.
According to Sputnik Belarus, their sites were blacklisted on Wednesday, December 10, without providing any specific reasons for the move.
The entries in the state-run database, however, reveal that access has been blocked “based on the decision of the Ministry of Information.”
Attempts to reach Bybit through the national internet provider Beltelecom returned a message indicating that the restrictions are in accordance with the Belarusian Law “On Mass Media.”
Some users are suggesting using a VPN, which is currently the only option, but Onliner warns that this could potentially result in the blocking of accounts by the exchanges themselves, as they are capable of detecting login attempts from banned jurisdictions or hidden IP addresses.
RBC later noticed that some of the targeted exchanges, like the blacklisted Bitget and OKX, as well as Kucoin and MEXC, became temporarily accessible.
The Russian news outlet also highlighted that other major digital-asset platforms, most notably Binance, the world’s largest crypto exchange by trading volume, and KuCoin, are not on the list at all.
Amid a growing volume of cryptocurrency transactions, the government in Minsk has been taking steps to update crypto rules in Belarus, a leader in the post-Soviet space in terms of regulations.
Belarus was one of the first countries in Eastern Europe to introduce a regulatory framework for what it broadly calls “digital tokens.” It did it with a presidential decree on the development of the digital economy, which went into force in 2018.
Since then, both the regulated and unregulated crypto markets in the country have been expanding, and in September, President Alexander Lukashenko urged officials and government institutions to catch up with the industry.
The long-term Belarusian leader also highlighted the increasing importance of cryptocurrencies, particularly in payments, with those made by his compatriots expected to reach $3 billion by the end of the year.
Access to global exchanges is now being restricted after financial authorities already banned private citizens and individual entrepreneurs from trading crypto on non-Belarusian exchanges last year, amid concerns about capital flight from the sanctioned nation.
Minsk has also been attacking the use of cryptocurrencies for illicit purposes. At the end of November, the head of the country’s state auditing body announced the establishment of a register for wallets used in criminal activities, as reported by Cryptopolitan.
The database has been set up as part of a mechanism for the seizure of such digital funds, introduced ahead of the country’s next assessment by the Financial Action Task Force (FATF), the international organization fighting money laundering and the financing of terrorism.
Last month, the National Bank of Belarus suggested the establishment of a unified framework for crypto regulation within the Eurasian Economic Union (EAEU) – the single market format led by Russia, which is now preparing to adopt its own comprehensive crypto rules in 2026.
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