Facebook Twitter YouTube SoundCloud RSS
 

Zelensky’s Ban on Ukrainian Orthodox Church Could Cost Ukraine EU Membership

Back in late 2023, when the Ukrainian parliament voted to ban the Moscow-linked Ukrainian Orthodox Church, shortsighted lawmakers had little idea of how this brash move would play out in the broader international court of public opinion. A paranoid and reactionary far-right Zelensky regime in Kiev accused the church and its clergy of “collaborating” with Russia in its Special Military Operation.

After all, the beleaguered Zelensky regime was simply following Washington and London’s longterm project to ‘sanitise’ Ukraine of its integral Russian historical and cultural roots.

Who knew it would become one of the biggest missteps in Ukraine’s disastrous war against Russia…


RT International reports…

Kiev’s attempts to ban the Ukrainian Orthodox Church (UOC) could have “dire consequences” for the nation’s hopes of joining the EU, The Telegraph newspaper quoted lawyers as saying on Saturday. The Ukrainian parliament is expected to vote later this month on closing down the country’s biggest Christian denomination with its 12,000 parishes.

Lawyers have written to British Prime Minister Rishi Sunak, US President Joe Biden and European Commission president Ursula von der Leyen urging them to put pressure on Ukrainian President Vladimir Zelensky to “suspend efforts to ban this historic institution,” the paper reported.

Such a decision could cause “serious harm to Orthodox Ukrainians” and call into question whether Ukraine can meet its commitments as a candidate for EU membership, according to a letter to Western leaders penned by international lawyer Robert Amsterdam, and quoted by the Telegraph.

“This will have dire ramifications for Ukraine’s entry into the European Union and its place in the Western world,” Amsterdam wrote. He added that Kiev had “falsely accused” the UOC of collaborating with Moscow and expressed concern about “arrests of clerics on spurious charges.”

Ukrainian authorities have long accused the UOC of having ties with the Russian Orthodox Church (ROC), even though the religious organization condemned Russia’s military operation in Ukraine and declared its autonomy from Moscow, following the escalation of the conflict in February 2022.

SEE ALSO: UN condemns Ukraine’s crackdown on its largest Christian church

The Security Service of Ukraine (SBU) has opened 65 criminal cases against UOC priests, sanctioned 17 clerics, and deprived 19 hierarchs of the country’s citizenship, according to TASS news agency.

The Ukrainian government’s attacks on the UOC are “a clear violation of the freedom of religion guaranteed by both international human rights law and the Ukrainian Constitution itself,” Amsterdam wrote.

In October, the Ukrainian parliament passed in a single reading a draft law on banning the canonical Ukrainian Orthodox Church, prepared by the Cabinet of Ministers on the order of President Vladimir Zelensky. The document was supported by 267 out of 450 deputies.

The head of the ROC, Patriarch Kirill, earlier condemned Kiev’s actions, saying the persecution of the UOC was taking place “in a country that swears allegiance to the European values of democracy and freedom”, including the freedom of religion.

Watch this brief report on the shuttering of religious freedom in NATO’s proxy state Ukraine: 

READ MORE UKRAINE NEWS AT: 21st CENTURY WIRE UKRAINE FILES

SUPPORT OUR INDEPENDENT MEDIA PLATFORM – BECOME A MEMBER @21WIRE.TV

 

 

 

Get Your Copy of New Dawn Magazine #203 - Mar-Apr Issue
Get Your Copy of New Dawn Magazine #203 - Mar-Apr Issue
Surfshark - Winter VPN Deal