{"id":1416,"date":"2025-08-29T18:20:59","date_gmt":"2025-08-29T18:20:59","guid":{"rendered":"https:\/\/globaltalenthq.com\/?p=1416"},"modified":"2025-09-08T18:43:22","modified_gmt":"2025-09-08T18:43:22","slug":"ukraine-takes-new-step-towards-banning-its-largest-christian-church-2","status":"publish","type":"post","link":"https:\/\/globaltalenthq.com\/index.php\/2025\/08\/29\/ukraine-takes-new-step-towards-banning-its-largest-christian-church-2\/","title":{"rendered":"Ukraine takes new step towards banning its largest Christian church"},"content":{"rendered":"
The government in Kiev has been increasingly cracking down on the Ukrainian Orthodox Church<\/strong><\/p>\n Kiev has taken another step toward banning the Ukrainian Orthodox Church (UOC) by officially declaring it linked to Russia. The ruling paves the way for a full ban on the country’s largest religious institution through the courts.<\/p>\n Vladimir Zelensky’s government has been increasingly taking aim at the UOC in recent years, a policy that has hardened in light of the conflict with Russia. Several of its churches have been seized, and criminal cases have been opened against clerics.<\/p>\n This week, Ukraine’s State Service for Ethnopolitics and Freedom of Conscience posted a statement on its website saying that the UOC had been found to be associated with “a foreign religious organization whose activities are banned in Ukraine.”<\/em> <\/p>\n A law enacted last year allows religious organizations affiliated with governments Kiev deems “aggressors”<\/em> to be banned. Zelensky has defended the measures as necessary to protect the country’s “spiritual independence.”<\/em> <\/p>\n The UOC has been de facto independent from the Russian Orthodox Church (ROC) since the 1990s, but maintained the canonical connection.<\/p>\n The UOC, which says it is being persecuted by the government, rejects the decision, a church representative told local media, adding that it has appealed it in court.<\/p>\n