In January, Russian Ambassador to the UN Vassily Nebenzia told a UN Security Council meeting that Russia had information about a number of initiatives in Ukraine aimed at the complete liquidation of the canonical Ukrainian Orthodox Church.
The chairman of the Department for External Church Relations of the Moscow Patriarchate, Metropolitan Anthony (Sevryuk) of Volokolamsk, told the meeting that criminal cases against bishops and priests of the Ukrainian Orthodox Church have been launched for far-fetched reasons.
"At a recent UN Security Council meeting, we drew attention to the threatening consequences of Kiev's state policy of persecution of canonical Orthodoxy, which could lead to the largest intra-confessional conflict in modern European history," Askaldovich said.
Askaldovich added that the West has launched a major attack on everything that is Russian, including representatives of the Russian Orthodox Church.
"Since the beginning of the special military operation, we have witnessed a frontal attack on everything that is Russian abroad," Askaldovich said.
"This negative process did not bypass the Russian Orthodox Church either. Its representatives in a number of unfriendly countries, as well as clergymen of autocephalous churches, have been subjected to severe moral and psychological pressure."
He noted that Orthodox priests are forced to unequivocally condemn Moscow's military operation in Ukraine and the policy of Russian President Vladimir Putin, to sever relations with the Russian Orthodox Church, and to support Ukraine's schismatic church.
In 2022, the Ukrainian authorities unleashed the largest persecution against the Ukrainian Orthodox Church in the country's modern history. Citing its connection to Russia, authorities in several regions of Ukraine banned the activities of the church. A bill stipulating the de facto ban of the church in Ukraine has been submitted to the country's parliament.