Author of bill to ban UOC urges MPs to speed up decision

The author of the draft law against the UOC and an MP of the Verkhovna Rada from the Holos party, Inna Sovsun, is not satisfied with the fact that her colleagues are in no hurry to liquidate the Ukrainian Orthodox Church, reports Glavcom.

According to her, this is because many MPs fear that drastic steps towards the UOC will lead to a split in society. However, according to Sovsun, this is erroneous.

"We need to put pressure on both the Council of Churches and politicians with arguments that it (the preservation of the UOC – Ed.) threatens national security. At the same time, the Council of Churches not only hinders this but also, for example, the ratification of the Istanbul Convention," the MP complained and urged the Ministry of Culture to break the lease agreements with the Lavras whose buildings are state-owned.

"The more we talk about banning the UOC, the more chances there are to finalise this issue," Sovsun concluded.

As reported, two bills on banning the Ukrainian Orthodox Church were submitted to the Verkhovna Rada – from the Svoboda party, whose author is Oksana Savchuk, and from the Holos party. However, the Speaker of the Verkhovna Rada, Ruslan Stefanchuk, said that no law capable of dividing society would be passed during the war.

As the UOJ wrote there is no law in Ukraine which would give local authorities the right to ban the UOC.

Read also

Fylypovych: God did not create the Church, place for rituals does not matter

The Church is a human invention, believes the religious scholar.

UOJ journalist Volodymyr Bobechko released on bail

Finally, Volodymyr can embrace his loved ones and family.

In Ukraine, SBU blocks websites covering the activities of UOC

The sites are blocked until the end of martial law.

Poturaev: Joining OCU is not a must, the main thing is to break with Moscow

The State Ethnopolitics and Freedom of Conscience Service will develop a regulatory framework within three months to implement the law aimed against the UOC.

Ukrainian stand-up comic: Why kill Orthodox Christians when there are Muslims?

After social media reactions to Anton Steniuk's video performance, the comedian apologized and deleted the segment with the "joke".

Ukraine plans to introduce a system of total surveillance over citizens

The Center for Joint Action believes that this system will allow law enforcement agencies to monitor any person anywhere, which is especially dangerous for critics of the government, opposition, and journalists.