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6 Nov, 2024 16:09

Russian Orthodox Church weighs in on death penalty

Patriarch Kirill says he welcomes Russia’s moratorium on capital punishment
Russian Orthodox Church weighs in on death penalty

The Russian Orthodox Church has never opposed the death penalty or called for its abolition, but has never welcomed it either, its head, Patriarch Kirill, has said. He added that he supports Russia’s moratorium on capital punishment.

Following the attack on the Crocus City Hall outside Moscow in April, in which 145 people were killed and hundreds more were wounded, former Russian President Dmitry Medvedev and several MPs suggested that the death penalty should be reinstated in the country for terrorists.

The head of the Russian Orthodox Church was asked to share his opinion on the issue on Sunday, during a meeting with the participants of the ‘Time of Heroes’ program, aimed at preparing veterans of the Ukraine conflict for leadership positions in state institutions.

“The death penalty has been around throughout human history. The Lord Jesus Christ did not condemn capital punishment, although he himself suffered the death penalty undeservedly,” he replied.

Patriarch Kirill called killing a person for their crimes an “extreme measure,” adding that it “would be best if people did not commit crimes that are deserving of the death penalty.”

“The Church has never insisted on the abolition of this punishment… and never condemned the death penalty if it was carried out in accordance with the law. But of course, it has never welcomed the death penalty anywhere,” he explained.

Kirill said he welcomes the moratorium on the death penalty, adding: “But I do not know what is better for a person” – the death penalty or life in prison, which is currently the maximum punishment.

“We must observe how this moratorium will affect the crime rate in our country. If crime goes down then, thank God, it would mean that there is no need to apply the death penalty.”

A moratorium on the death penalty was introduced in Russia in 1997 when it joined the Council of Europe. The last death sentence in the country was carried out a year earlier. Last year, Russia withdrew from the Council of Europe, insisting that the organization had been hijacked by the West in order to promote its interests.

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