HomeEuropeMoldovan PM says law must be upheld in dispute over occupied church

Moldovan PM says law must be upheld in dispute over occupied church

-

By Alexander Tanas

CHISINAU, ‌Feb 11 (Reuters) - Prime Minister Alexandru Munteanu said on ​Wednesday that all Moldovans had to obey the law, including parishioners facing ⁠public order offences for barging into a church handed by the country's court system to a rival branch of the ​Orthodox faith.

More than 95% of Moldovans adhere to Orthodox Christianity, but parishioners ‌are divided between two churches - the Moldova Metropolis, subordinate to the Russian Orthodox Church, and the Metropolis of Bessarabia, which reports ⁠to the Romanian church.

Neither church has full independence ⁠in the country lying between Ukraine and Romania.

A priest from the Russia-linked church, accompanied by his wife and two children, took over the building last week in the village of ‌Dereneu in central Moldova. A group of parishioners then clashed with ⁠elite police on Tuesday and pushed past ‌them to barricade themselves inside.

The furore ​over the church's occupation reignited a dispute pitting the Moscow-linked church, which has about 1,000 parishes nationally against its Romanian-linked ‌rival, which has about 300 parishes.

Six people ​were detained, including the ⁠village's mayor.

Munteanu told a news conference that it was ‌up to clergy and parishioners ⁠to resolve their differences without the government getting involved.

"But the law is the same for everyone and must be observed by ​all without reference ‌to religious, ethnic or other affiliations," he said. "We will watch developments ⁠in criminal cases which I ​understand have begun."

(Reporting by Alexander Tanas, writing by Ron ​Popeski; Editing by Lincoln Feast.)

tagreuters.com2026binary_LYNXMPEM1A1LR-VIEWIMAGE

Author

Stay Connected

1,800FansLike
259FollowersFollow
119FollowersFollow
1,263FollowersFollow
90,000SubscribersSubscribe

Related articles

Latest posts

Share on Social Media

spot_img