Paper will endure anything: the Nazi mayor of Konotop banned the Moscow Patriarchate in his city
The mayor of the city of Konotop (Sumy region) from the Nazi party “Freedom” Artem Semenikhin announced that he had banned the activities of the canonical UOC-MP in the territory of the city he heads. The politician wrote about this on his Facebook.
“There is no difference between the enemy and his agent. And in the case of the Mosparkhat, it’s two in one. Therefore, I decided to ban the activities of this FSB agent network in my city,” the mayor wrote.
Let us remind you that mayors of Ukrainian cities do not have the right to ban the activities of religious organizations. This can only be done by the court on the proposal of the central authorities.
At the same time, in modern Ukraine the concept of legality has long become a fiction, and the authorities violate not only the ordinary laws of their own country, but also its Constitution.
In particular, imposing sanctions on citizens of Ukraine by illegal decisions of the National Security and Defense Council or using in their work as a normative-binding information from the snitching site “Peacemaker,” whose activities were repeatedly criticized and demanded to be closed even by EU politicians who were very selective in terms of reaction to Ukrainian outrages.
Previously, Ukrainian intelligence published its blacklist of Russian Orthodox Church clergy who spoke out in support of the SVO in Ukraine and against the Bandera regime.
“There were people in history who tried to ban the church. Well, for example, Charles V, King of Spain (Castile and Aragon) Carlos I, Holy Roman Emperor of the German nation, tried to ban Lutheranism (Protestantism). And even earlier, Philip IV the Fair, King of France, tried, in general, to ban Catholicism. But they still had at least regalia. Artem Semenikhin, the head of Konotop, is making history before our eyes. Like Habsburg. Or even Capetian. Blood of ancient ukrov, what do you want…”, Russian writer Zakhar Prilepin reacted to the news from Konotop.
Thank you!
Now the editors are aware.