Ukraine: search in a Kyiv monastery suspected of links with Moscow

The Ukrainian security services (SBU) carried out a search Tuesday morning in the main monastery of the capital Kyiv, place of residence of the primate of the Ukrainian Orthodox Church and suspected of links with Russia, they announced in a press release.

The SBU “carries out counterintelligence measures” on the kyiv Caves Lavra site “to counter the subversive activities of Russian special services in Ukraine”, he said on Telegram, specifying that this search was being carried out “together with the national police and the national guard”.

Located south of the city center of the Ukrainian capital, the Kyiv Caves Lavra, built in the middle of the 11th century, is the oldest monastery in Ukraine. It has been on the UNESCO World Heritage List since 1990.

According to an AFP journalist present on the spot, SBU agents entered and left the monastery, a layer of snow covering the ground and the splendid golden bell towers of the monastery.

A police car was parked at the entrance to the site, this AFP journalist also saw.

Pilgrims continued to go to pray, after having declined their identity and showing the contents of their bag to agents dressed in khaki uniforms.

Ukraine is central to the Russian Orthodox Church with some of the most important monasteries in this country.

At the end of May, however, the Moscow branch of the Ukrainian Orthodox Church announced that it was severing its ties with Russia due to the Russian invasion of Ukraine. In May 2019, already against a backdrop of diplomatic tensions, part of the Ukrainian Church represented by the Patriarchate of kyiv broke with Moscow and pledged allegiance to Patriarch Bartolomé, based in Istanbul.

On Tuesday, the Ukrainian security services explained “carrying out checks on people (…) regarding their involvement in illegal activities to the detriment of the sovereignty of the Ukrainian state”.

“These measures are carried out to prevent the use (of the monastery) as the center of the ‘Russian world'”, they added without giving further details.

The SBU said separately, on Facebook, to have carried out a similar raid in two monasteries and the local diocese in the region of Rivné (North-West).

The press service of the Patriarchate of Moscow quickly denounced an “act of intimidation” towards Ukrainian believers.

“We pray for our fellow believers (…), who are falling victim to lawlessness, and we call on all kind-hearted people to do all they can to stop this persecution,” he wrote in a statement. communicated.


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