Expert: Now the legitimacy of Tomos drifting in the criminal direction

The Tomos tour of the former President of Ukraine Petro Poroshenko. Photo: iz.ru

The State Bureau of Investigation of Ukraine has registered a criminal case against former President of Ukraine Petro Poroshenko under the article on inciting inter-religious hatred during the receipt of the Tomos by the OCU, it is now important that Poroshenko should be held accountable for the deed, said political analyst Elena Dyachenko.

“It is extremely important for the society now to receive a signal from the authorities that justice and legality will be established,” the political scientist said in the “Apostrophe” online edition. “That an official who violates a basic human right – the right to freedom of conscience and religion – will be held accountable under the law, that all unlawful acts will be publicly condemned, and the state will act as an arbitrator and guarantee the implementation of the Constitution.”

According to the expert, this is the only way to achieve the establishment of an interfaith peace in Ukraine, and then a political one.

Dyachenko believes that during the creation of the OCU, Poroshenko not only incited religious hatred, which is still going on, but also exceeded his constitutional authority as head of state when he “deliberately and intentionally” grossly intervened in the affairs of the Church. The Tomos, however, led only to losses and a split.

Dyachenko also explained why the UOC-KP submitted an application against Poroshenko to the State Bureau of Investigations. According to the political expert, the Tomos – “a commercial deal between a politician who wanted to use the Church and a churchman who wanted to use politics” – lost his legitimacy with the withdrawal from the OCU of the Kyiv Patriarchate.

“In the context of relations between Petro Poroshenko and Patriarch Filaret, it is not surprising that this came to the usual denunciation. The fact is that the OCU did not have their churches and property, and, apparently, they did not plan to build them. On the one hand, it was planned to make the eparchies and property of the Kyiv Patriarchate the material basis of the OCU, and on the other, there was a hope for communities of the canonical Ukrainian Orthodox Church to join the OCU. Both both failed,” the expert explained.

Dyachenko noted that Poroshenko did not fulfill the promises made to the head of the UOC-KP Filaret Denisenko, which prompted Filaret to file an application with the SBU and the State Bureau of Investigations.

“With the registration of today's criminal proceedings under Article 161 of the Criminal Code, we can say that the legality of the Tomos is already drifting in the criminal direction,” she concluded.

Poroshenko said earlier that a criminal case was brought against him because of the Tomos for the OCU. Filaret later noted that there is no truth in the OCU’s statement on Poroshenko.

Read also

Ukraine's Cabinet of Ministers Adopts Resolution to Streamline UOC Ban—Blocks US Access to Website

The resolution seeks to "open the way to the ban of organizations affiliated with the Russian Orthodox Church."

UOC Temple Seized by OCU and Local Police in Khmelnytsky

The Holy Resurrection Church (UOC) is the latest temple seized by activists of the OCU and various ultra-nationalist groups.

Andrew Schulz says Orthodoxy is the One True Church

In a recent interview with noted Biblical Scholar Wesley Huf, Andrew Schulz pressed him on the claims of the Orthodox Church.

Texas Turns on the Establishment: Ukraine War Splits the GOP’s Strongest State

Senator John Cornyn, a Bush-era hawk and symbol of Republican orthodoxy, faces a political earthquake as Trump-aligned Ken Paxton surges ahead in the polls.

ROCOR nun to teach at OCU academy

Vassa Larin will become a lecturer at the Department of Church-Practical Disciplines at an OCU educational institution.

Archaeologists "Discover" Jesus’ Tomb (Right Where It’s Always Been)

Excavations at Jerusalem’s Church of the Holy Sepulchre reaffirm what Christians have claimed for centuries