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Ukraine’s largest Orthodox church accused of collaborating with Russia

The Ukraine government is preparing to ban the country’s largest Orthodox church over its Moscow links

Ukraine’s largest Orthodox church accused of collaborating with Russia
Lviv, 2022: members of a Moscow-affiliated church examine fire damage and anti-Russian graffiti - (c) Alamy Stock Photo/Pavlo Palamarchuk/SOPA Images via ZUMA Press Wire. All rights reserved
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Ukraine’s largest Orthodox church is in crisis over its ongoing connections to Moscow. It faces a ban by the Ukrainian government, raids by the security services and internal turmoil.

The Ukrainian Orthodox Church of the Moscow Patriarchate has hundreds of thousands of followers in the country. But since Russia’s invasion this year, it has come under increasing scrutiny. Until May it was officially subordinate to the Russian Orthodox Church, based in Moscow, and its leaders appear unwilling to make the break complete.

At the start of December, President Volodymyr Zelenskyi announced that the Ukrainian state would prevent “religious organisations affiliated with centres of influence in the Russian Federation” from operating in the country for the sake of Ukraine’s “spiritual independence”. Sanctions have also been imposed on a number of clergy.