Russia & Former Soviet Union

Kiev to crack down on Russian Orthodox Church

Last week, the Ukraine’s domestic security agency raided the country’s main Orthodox Christian monastery

A Ukraine’s Security Service (SBU) serviceman talks with a visitor in front of Kiev Pechersk Lavra monastery on November 22, 2022. ©  Sergei CHUZAVKOV / AFP

Ukrainian President Vladimir Zelensky has announced new measures seeking to ban religious institutions deemed to have links with Russia. He said the move is intended to safeguard the nation’s “spiritual independence” amid Kiev’s conflict with Moscow.

The statement comes as the SBU, Ukraine’s domestic security agency, launched what it called a “counter intelligence” action at several Ukrainian Orthodox Church sites in three regions. The raids targeted at least eight religious sites on Friday, aiming to identify individuals suspected of undermining Ukraine’s sovereignty.

Writing on Telegram, Zelensky said on Thursday that the National Security and Defense Council had held a meeting, which focused on “numerous facts of ties of certain religious circles in Ukraine with the aggressor state.” The Council has instructed Ukraine’s government to introduce a law to make it impossible for “religious organizations affiliated with centers of influence” in Russia to operate in the country, Zelensky said.

Meanwhile, Ukraine’s state watchdog responsible for overseeing the religious sphere was ordered to examine the Statute on the Administration of the Ukrainian Orthodox Church and establish whether it has religious links with the Moscow Patriarchate. Should this be the case, Ukrainian authorities will “take measures prescribed by the law.”

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The Council also accused Russian special services of “subversive activities” in the religious sphere and instructed all national security bodies to “identify and counter” these alleged efforts. According to Zelensky, Kiev will also impose personal sanctions on a number of individuals, with the list expected to be published in the near future.

The Ukrainian authorities also intend to check whether religious organizations have the right to use property located on the territory of the Kiev Pechersk Lavra, Zelensky said in an apparent reference to the Ukrainian Orthodox Church, which currently administers the site.

Last week, the lavra, which is considered to be the most prominent Orthodox Christian monastery in Ukraine, was raided by the SBU. The agency said it wanted to prevent alleged “subversive activities of Russian special services” and to check claims that it was being used to hide “teams of saboteurs, foreign citizens, weapons, etc.”

On Thursday, the SBU said the lavra’s clergy had been charged with the crime of “glorifying Russia,” after receiving a tip that the priest and several “accomplices” had praised the “Russian world.”

Ukraine has long experienced religious tensions, with a number of entities claiming to be the true Ukrainian Orthodox Church, challenging the authority of the Moscow Patriarchate.

The two main rival factions are the Ukrainian Orthodox Church, which declared independence from Moscow after Russia launched its military operation in the country in February, and the Orthodox Church of Ukraine (OCU), which was established in 2018 with the help of then-president Pyotr Poroshenko. It is considered by the Russian Orthodox Church to be schismatic.

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