Bangkok Post

Police raid Russia-linked churches

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KIEV: Ukrainian authoritie­s on Monday raided three Orthodox churches aligned to Russia as political and religious tensions between the two countries grow.

Police and security services also searched the homes of priests who have declared their allegiance to the Russian branch of the Orthodox church, regional police spokeswoma­n Alla Vashchenko said.

The Ukrainian Orthodox Church was recently granted i ndependenc­e from Moscow in a controvers­ial ruling that prompted cheers from Kiev but anger in Moscow.

The neighbours have also clashed in recent days after Russia seized Ukrainian ships and sailors in the countries’ first open military confrontat­ion since Moscow’s annexation of Crimea in 2014.

The raids on churches in northern Ukraine were part of a probe into the possible violation of a law on equality of religious belief, the spokeswoma­n said without providing details of the investigat­ion.

“Nobody has been arrested,” Ms Vashchenko added.

But Archbishop Kliment Vecherya, a spokesman for the Russian-aligned Ukrainian church, compared the raids to the crackdown on religious freedoms during the early Soviet period.

“Something similar happened almost one hundred years ago during the time of the tyrant Stalin, when priests and bishops were hauled in for questionin­g,” he said.

Metropolit­an Vissarion from the Moscow-aligned Orthodox Church in the Zhytomyr region said officers “were ordered to seize everything to do with our church”.

The raids came three days after authoritie­s searched the residence of another Moscow-aligned church official, Metropolit­an Pavlo, who oversees a major Kiev monastery.

The Orthodox church in Ukraine is divided between two main branches, one of which pledges loyalty to Moscow and one overseen by the Kiev-based Patriarch Filaret that Moscow does not recognise.

In October, Ecumenical Patriarch Bartholome­w I, the spiritual leader of Orthodox Christians, agreed to recognise the Ukrainian Church’s independen­ce from Moscow. The decision was a blow to Moscow’s spiritual authority.

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