Ukrainian leaders have accused the Moscow-linked UOC of abetting
the Kremlin's 30-month-old assault by spreading pro-Russian
propaganda and housing spies.
A bill passed into law in parliament on Tuesday bans the Russian
Orthodox Church on Ukrainian territory, and a government
commission will assemble a list of "affiliated" organizations
whose activities are not allowed. The list is expected to target
the UOC specifically.
The decision to ban them would be made by a court.
A total of 265 lawmakers voted in favor of the bill, with 29
against, parliamentarian Yaroslav Zhelezniak said on Telegram.
"Today we have embarked on the inevitable path of cleansing from
within the Kremlin's agent network, which has been hiding behind
the mask of a religious organisation for decades," lawmaker
Roman Lozynskyi said on Facebook.
There was no immediate reaction from the minority church but it
has said in the past that it had cut ties with the ROC, which is
an open supporter of Moscow's war, after the February 2022
invasion.
Ukrainian officials dispute that claim and have launched dozens
of criminal proceedings, including treason charges, against
dozens of their clerics. At least one has been sent to Russia as
part of a prisoner swap.
The legislation still needs a signature from President Volodymyr
Zelenskiy, who described the move earlier this month as "aimed
at strengthening Ukraine's spiritual independence".
He said the law should guarantee "there will be no manipulation
of the Ukrainian Church from Moscow".
(Reporting by Yuliia Dysa, Dan Peleschuk, additional reporting
Olena Harmash; Editing by Angus MacSwan)
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