He was charged under Article 371 of the Belarus criminal code, "illegal crossing of the state boundary".
"I am a quiet, peaceful person," said Suryapin, who was released two weeks ago and banned from leaving the small town of Slutsk. "I am not political, I just want to do independent journalism, as much as that is possible in Belarus."
Suryapin says he knew when he posted the photographs that it would be a scandal, but he did not imagine that he would be arrested. "I had the first pictures, and it was my duty as a journalist to publish them. I had no contact with these Swedes or with any other Swedes."
Sergei Basharimov, an estate agent, was jailed for renting an apartment in Minsk to Studio Total. Mazetti says he did not tell either of the arrested men, or any Belarusians, about his plans. Both have been released, but could still be jailed for up to seven years.
The KGB has demanded that Mazetti and his colleagues appear in Minsk for questioning, a request that was met with ridicule, in an open letter in which they called Lukashenko an "armed clown".
While some in the Belarusian opposition think it was a good way to show up the absurdity of Lukashenko's regime, not everyone was impressed.
Alexander Feduta, a political analyst who spent part of last year in jail for backing a rival candidate to Lukashenko in 2010, said: "It's a phenomenal example of idiocy, and they are lucky they didn't get shot down and killed."
Mazetti said the response from Lukashenko shows he is rattled.
"Lukashenko is starting to behave irrationally. When a dictator starts doing this, as we've seen this year in lots of other countries across the world, the only way is downhill. It's only a matter of time."
- Independent