Northwest Arkansas Democrat-Gazette

Religious element added to sanctions that target Russia

EU considers including patriarch who has tried to justify invasion of Ukraine

- NICOLE WINFIELD AND SAMUEL PETREQUIN

ROME — The European Union plans to sanction the head of the Russian Orthodox Church in its next round of measures to punish Russia’s invasion of Ukraine, EU diplomats said Wednesday, opening a new religious front in Europe’s sanctions regime.

The proposal, which must be approved by the 27-member bloc, drew immediate criticism from the Russian Orthodox Church, which also lashed out Wednesday at Pope Francis for his recent comments about Patriarch Kirill.

Kirill, the head of one of the largest and most influentia­l churches in Eastern Orthodoxy, has justified Russia’s invasion on spiritual grounds, describing it as a “metaphysic­al” battle against the West and its “gay parades.”

Three EU diplomats with direct knowledge of the discussion­s said negotiatio­ns to add Kirill’s name to the EU list of sanctioned individual­s were continuing Wednesday. If approved by EU members, Kirill would face travel bans and a freeze of assets, joining 1,093 individual­s, including Putin and oligarchs, as well as 80 entities already subject to the punishing measures.

In a statement Wednesday, the Russian Orthodox Church vowed the sanctions would never intimidate Kirill and would just prolong the conflict.

“Patriarch Kirill comes from a family whose members have been subjected to repression for decades for their faith and moral standing during the days of militant communist atheism, and none of them were intimidate­d by the prospect of imprisonme­nt and repression,” church spokesman Vladimir Legoyda said on his messaging app channel. “You have to be completely unaware of the history of our church to think that it’s possible to scare its clergy and believers by putting them on some kind of lists.”

He added that the measure would only delay the prospect of peace “for which the Russian Orthodox Church prays on the blessing of His Holiness the Patriarch in every liturgy.”

Kirill has echoed Putin’s claims that Ukraine was engaged in the “exterminat­ion” of Russian loyalists in Donbas, the breakaway eastern region of Ukraine held since 2014 by Russian-backed separatist groups. And in his most recent published remarks, he denied Russia had even launched the invasion.

“We don’t want to fight anyone. Russia has never attacked anyone,” he said Wednesday at the end of a Divine Liturgy at the Archangel Cathedral in Moscow, according to a text of his remarks on the church website. “It is amazing that a great and powerful country never attacked anyone — it only defended its borders.”

Francis and Kirill had a video conference call March 15, and were due to meet for a second time next month in Jerusalem, but the meeting was called off on the advice of Vatican diplomats.

The pope told Italian daily Corriere della Sera in an interview published Tuesday that Kirill spent the first half of their 40-minute video call reading from a piece of paper justifying the invasion.

“”I listened and told him: ‘I don’t understand any of this. Brother, we are not clerics of the state, we cannot use language of politics, but that of Jesus. For this we need to find the paths of peace, to stop the firing of arms.’”

He added that Kirill “cannot turn into Putin’s altar boy,” a dismissive term used by a top U.S. Ukrainian Greek Catholic archbishop.

In a statement Wednesday on its website, the Moscow Patriarcha­te’s foreign relations office said it was “regrettabl­e” that Francis “chose the wrong tone” to convey the content of the conversati­on during the interview.

“Such statements are unlikely to contribute to the establishm­ent of a constructi­ve dialogue between the Roman Catholic and Russian Orthodox Churches, which is especially needed at the present time,” the statement said.

The statement then said that Kirill had used the call to explain the origins of the conflict, citing attacks on Russian speakers in Ukraine dating from 2014 and NATO’s eastward expansion.

 ?? (AP/Russian Orthodox Church Press Service/Sergei Vlasov,) ?? Russian Orthodox Church Patriarch Kirill conducts an Easter weekend service April 23 at the Christ the Savior Cathedral in Moscow. “We don’t want to fight anyone. Russia has never attacked anyone,” Kirill said Wednesday at the end of a Divine Liturgy.
(AP/Russian Orthodox Church Press Service/Sergei Vlasov,) Russian Orthodox Church Patriarch Kirill conducts an Easter weekend service April 23 at the Christ the Savior Cathedral in Moscow. “We don’t want to fight anyone. Russia has never attacked anyone,” Kirill said Wednesday at the end of a Divine Liturgy.

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