Source:                      www.forum18.org

Date:                           January 17, 2026

 


https://www.forum18.org/archive.php?article_id=3024
By Victoria Arnold, Forum 18

A court in the southern Russian region of Krasnodar has fined an
independent Orthodox priest the equivalent of more than two months' average
wage in four administrative prosecutions for allegedly "discrediting" the
Russian Armed Forces and expressing "overt disrespect" for society, state
bodies, and state symbols. Police based at least two of these cases on
articles which Hieromonk Iona Sigida posted on his church's website.

In four hearings in late December 2025, Slavyansk City Court found Fr Iona
guilty on one charge of "discreditation" of the Russian Armed Forces
(Administrative Code Article 20.3.3, Part 1), and three charges of
disseminating information expressing "overt disrespect for society, the
state, official state symbols of the Russian Federation, the Constitution
of the Russian Federation, or bodies exercising state power in the Russian
Federation" (Administrative Code Article 20.1, Part 3) (see below).

Forum 18 wrote to Slavyansk City Court and the Krasnodar Region court
system's unified press service, asking why the peaceful expression of
religious views on politics and the war in Ukraine was considered either
"discreditation" of the Armed Forces or "disrespect" for society or the
state. The chair of Slavyansk City Court responded on 15 January, directing
Forum 18 to the written decisions on the court website (see below).

On 20 November 2025, the Investigative Committee opened two cases against
Fr Iona under Criminal Code Article 354.1, Part 4. The cases apparently
also relate to materials he published on the church website, criticising
the way Victory Day (9 May) and other Soviet holidays are marked. It is
unknown when these cases might reach court. At present, Fr Iona is under
house arrest at the home he shares in Slavyansk-na-Kubani with his church's
88-year-old leader, Archbishop Viktor Pivovarov (see below).

Parishioners of the Holy Intercession Tikhonite Church believe that both Fr
Iona's criminal and administrative prosecutions are "politically motivated
and related to [Sigida's] pacifist stance". "The calls for peace that
Hieromonk Iona published on the church website are the very essence of the
Orthodox faith", one church member, Sergey, told Caucasian Knot (see
below).

The retrial of Buddhist leader Ilya Vasilyev, also for opposing Russia's
war in Ukraine on religious grounds, is now due to begin on 19 January
2026, according to the Moscow court system's online portal. In October
2025, appeal judges overturned his conviction on technical grounds, and
sent his case back for re-examination (see below).

On 23 December 2025, Moscow City Court rejected Orthodox journalist Kseniya
Luchenko's appeal against a detention order for her issued in absentia on
24 November 2025. The initial 2-month detention order will be up for
renewal in late January. Luchenko has lived outside Russia since 2022 (see
below).

The Investigative Committee in Moscow opened a case against Luchenko in
September 2025 under Criminal Code Article 207.3, Part 2 Paragraph d
("Public dissemination of knowingly false information about the use of the
Armed Forces of the Russian Federation for reasons of political,
ideological, racial, national or religious hatred or enmity, or for reasons
of hatred or enmity against any social group"). This carries a maximum
punishment of 10 years' imprisonment (see below).

Investigators initiated the case on the basis of a Telegram post in which
Luchenko condemned a Russian missile strike on a Kyiv children's hospital
in July 2024, and contrasted this with the Russian state and Moscow
Patriarchate's promotion of so-called "traditional values" (see below).

Criminal, administrative convictions for opposing Russia's war on religious
grounds

Since February 2022, courts have sentenced four people to imprisonment and
fined three (https://www.forum18.org/archive.php?article_id=3018) on
criminal charges for opposing Russia's war against Ukraine on religious
grounds. Investigators have also opened four criminal cases against people
who have left Russia, and have placed them on the Federal Wanted List
(https://www.forum18.org/archive.php?article_id=3011).

Most recently, the Investigative Committee charged exiled Orthodox
journalist Kseniya Luchenko with "Public dissemination of knowingly false
information about the use of the Armed Forces of the Russian Federation for
reasons of political, ideological, racial, national or religious hatred or
enmity, or for reasons of hatred or enmity against any social group"
(Criminal Code Article 207.3, Part 2, Paragraph d) (see below).

Having been postponed from 25 December 2025, the retrial of Buddhist leader
Ilya Vasilyev is due to begin on 19 January 2026 at Moscow's Preobrazhensky
District Court, according to the Moscow court system's online portal.

In October 2025, Moscow City Court overturned Vasilyev's conviction
(https://www.forum18.org/archive.php?article_id=3018) under Criminal Code
Article 207.3 ("Public dissemination of knowingly false information about
the use of the Armed Forces of the Russian Federation"), Part 2, Paragraph
d ("for reasons of political, ideological, racial, national or religious
hatred or enmity, or for reasons of hatred or enmity against any social
group") on technical grounds. The court sent his case back for
re-examination.

Individuals also continue to face prosecution under Administrative Code
Article 20.3.3 ("Public actions aimed at discrediting the use of the Armed
Forces of the Russian Federation") for opposing the war in Ukraine from a
religious perspective.

Ever-increasing internet censorship has seen websites and materials blocked
(https://www.forum18.org/archive.php?article_id=2934) for: "extremist"
content; opposition to Russia's war against Ukraine from a religious
perspective; material supporting LGBT+ people in religious communities;
Ukraine-based religious websites; social media of prosecuted individuals;
and news and NGO sites which include coverage of freedom of religion or
belief violations.

The Justice Ministry has also added 13 religious leaders and activists
(https://www.forum18.org/archive.php?article_id=2994) to its register of
"foreign agents", largely for reasons related to their opposition to
Russia's invasion of Ukraine.

Krasnodar Region: Multiple prosecutions of anti-war Orthodox priest

In December 2025, Slavyansk City Court heard four administrative cases
against Fr Iona (Ilya) Sigida (born 7 February 1991). The court fined him a
total of 155,000 Roubles, about 10 weeks' average local wage. He has
declined to appeal against any of the convictions – at least three of
which have now entered legal force, according to the court website.

Fr Iona has pawned his car in order to pay the fines, a church member based
outside Russia told Forum 18 on 5 January 2026.

Fr Iona is a hieromonk in an independent Orthodox church led by Archbishop
Viktor Pivovarov, who has himself faced both administrative and criminal
prosecution (https://www.forum18.org/archive.php?article_id=3015) for his
condemnation of the Russian invasion of Ukraine. It is not in communion
with the Moscow Patriarchate.

The court registered the four administrative cases
(https://forum18.org/archive.php?article_id=3021) against Fr Iona on 8
December 2025. One was under Administrative Code Article 20.3.3, Part 1
("Public actions aimed at discrediting the use of the Armed Forces of the
Russian Federation"), the other three under Administrative Code Article
20.1, Part 3.

Administrative Code Article 20.1 punishes "Petty hooliganism" – Part 3
covers "Dissemination on information and telecommunications networks,
including the Internet, of information which expresses in an indecent form,
which insults human dignity and public morality, overt disrespect for
society, the state, official state symbols of the Russian Federation, the
Constitution of the Russian Federation, or bodies exercising state power in
the Russian Federation, with the exception of cases provided for in Article
20.3.1 of this Code, if these actions do not constitute a criminally
punishable act".

Forum 18 wrote to Slavyansk City Court and the Krasnodar Region court
system's unified press service before the start of the working day of 12
January 2026, asking why the peaceful expression of religious views on
politics and the war in Ukraine was considered either "discreditation" of
the Armed Forces or "disrespect" for society or the state, and which
materials formed the basis for the two cases for which the court has not
yet published written decisions.

Judge Vladimir Otroshko, chair of Slavyansk City Court and the judge who
found Fr Iona guilty in one of his Article 20.1, Part 3 cases, responded on
15 January. He did not answer Forum 18's questions, but stated that "the
position of the court is set out in detail in the judicial decisions
following the examination of materials on the administrative offences ..
these judicial decisions are published in the prescribed manner on the
website of Slavyansk City Court".

Fr Iona is also facing criminal charges for a possibly related offence of
"overt disrespect for society about days of military glory" (Criminal Code
Article 354.1, Part 4), apparently for articles he posted on the website of
the Holy Intercession Tikhonite Church in Slavyansk-na-Kubani.

Fr Iona and Archbishop Viktor wrote articles for the church website until
summer 2024. As well as discussing theology and liturgy, these writings
often critically assessed aspects of Russian history and present-day
society from a religious perspective. After the Russian invasion of Ukraine
in February 2022, they also condemned the war from a religious perspective.


According to written decisions on the court website, articles by Fr Iona
formed the basis for his prosecution under Administrative Code Article
20.3.3, Part 1 and for at least one of the cases under Article 20.3, Part
1. Decisions for the other two cases are not publicly available.

On 18 December 2025, Judge Vladimir Otroshko fined Fr Iona, who was not
present in court, 40,000 Roubles (about 3 weeks' average local wage) under
Administrative Code Article 20.1, Part 3.

Police based their case on an article on the church website,
eshatologia.org, in which Fr Iona wrote "a man, asking himself the
question: who is Mister Putin, saw in a dream a madman-maniac with a bare
torso and a large knife, who was cutting off raw human flesh with blood and
greedily devouring it". According to the written decision, "This statement
is aimed at showing blatant disrespect for the state".

The court has redacted the dates on which Fr Iona published the article and
on which investigators first discovered it. It is known, however, that
nothing was posted on the church website after summer 2024. The statute of
limitations on Article 20.1, Part 3 is three months from the date an
offence is committed.

Nevertheless, Judge Otroshko noted that the Supreme Court ruled in 2005
that "a continuing administrative offence is an action or inaction that
consists of a prolonged, uninterrupted failure to perform or improper
performance of obligations stipulated by law .. the day of discovery of a
continuing administrative offence is considered to be the day when the
official authorised to draw up an administrative protocol identified the
fact of its commission".

According to the Administrative Code (Article 4.5 Part 2), the statute of
limitations on prosecuting a continuing administrative offence is counted
from the date of discovery of the administrative offence.

The judge concluded that Fr Iona's publication of the article "has the
characteristics of a continuing offence, and is ongoing .. therefore, the
statute of limitations for bringing I.P. Sigida to administrative liability
has not expired".

On 23 December 2025, Judge Natalya Kovalchuk found Fr Iona guilty under
Administrative Code Article 20.3.3, Part 1 and fined him another 40,000
Roubles (about 3 weeks' average local wage).

The basis for this administrative prosecution was an article he had posted
on the church website on 24 February 2022, the day Russia launched its
full-scale invasion of Ukraine. Investigators found this article on 24
November 2025.

In this article, Fr Iona wrote: "Today, on the night of 23-24 February, the
newly revealed antichrist, the embodiment of the devil, V. Putin, sent his
army to destroy the last unconquered holy Rus' in the person of Ukraine",
according to the written decision, "thereby committing public actions aimed
at discrediting the use of the Russian Armed Forces to protect the
interests of the Russian Federation and its citizens, and to maintain
international peace and security".

On this occasion, Fr Iona was in court. He pleaded not guilty, arguing that
Article 20.3.3 was not in effect at the time he posted the article. Judge
Kovalchuk, however, dismissed this as "a line of defence which is refuted
by the evidence examined and the data obtained during the case proceedings,
in which I.P Sigida stated that he had not yet removed the article from the
Internet".

The judge concluded that Fr Iona's actions, "allowing the publication of a
text containing a negative assessment of the use of the Russian Armed
Forces in the special military operation to be openly accessible on the
Internet, were aimed at discrediting, that is, slandering and deliberately
undermining the authority of the Russian Armed Forces used in the special
military operation, and distorting the goals and objectives set before
them".

Fr Iona received another 40,000 Rouble fine under Article 20.3, Part 1 on
23 December 2025, and a 35,000 Rouble fine, also under Article 20.3, Part
1, on 29 December 2025. It is unknown which materials these prosecutions
were based on.

Fr Iona has not lodged any appeals. "He cited his religious beliefs as the
reason for his refusal, declining to respond to the authorities' aggression
against believers", independent media outlet Caucasian Knot reported on 4
January 2026 (https://www.kavkaz-uzel.eu/articles/419648).

Krasnodar Region: "Putting him on trial for his faith is already political"

Parishioners of the Holy Intercession Church believe that both Fr Iona's
criminal and administrative prosecutions are "politically motivated and
related to [Sigida's] pacifist stance". "The calls for peace that Hieromonk
Iona published on the church website are the very essence of the Orthodox
faith," one church member, Sergey, told Caucasian Knot. "Putting him on
trial for his faith is already political."

The practice of initiating multiple administrative prosecutions while a
criminal case is already underway "is not a mistake and not chaos, but a
deliberate tactic", Timur Filippov (an independent lawyer originally from
Krasnodar Region but now based outside Russia) who was not involved in Fr
Iona's cases, commented to Caucasian Knot
(https://www.kavkaz-uzel.eu/articles/419648) on 4 January. "Administrative
cases are used as a tool of pressure, not as a means of punishment for
specific offences."

Such administrative cases – which can "resurface as often as necessary"
– create an impression of the defendant as a "systematic violator", can
worsen their procedural position, and exert "psychological and financial
pressure", Filippov added. "This isn't justice, but control and
exhaustion."

Filippov also noted that prosecuting individuals for materials published
before the adoption of the relevant laws "formally contradicts the
Constitution", but that this is "ignored in such cases". Fr Iona was fined
for an article published on 24 February 2022, when Administrative Code
Article 20.3.3 did not come into force until 4 March 2022.

Krasnodar Region: Orthodox priest also facing criminal investigation

Fr Iona (Ilya Sigida) is currently under investigation on two charges
(https://www.forum18.org/archive.php?article_id=3015) of "Dissemination of
information expressing overt disrespect for society about days of military
glory and commemorative dates of Russia associated with the defence of the
Fatherland, as well as desecration of symbols of military glory of Russia,
insult to the memory of defenders of the Fatherland or humiliation of the
honour and dignity of a veteran of the Great Patriotic War, committed
publicly" (Criminal Code Article 354.1, Part 4).

Parishioners believe the cases to be based on articles Fr Iona wrote on the
church's website about Soviet holidays – in particular, Victory Day (9
May).

National Guard troops raided Holy Intercession Church at about 6 am on 27
November 2025 and arrested Fr Iona. During his interrogation, they or
Investigative Committee officials forcibly shaved his hair and beard, beat
him, and shocked him with a stun gun, Fr Iona stated after his release
(https://www.forum18.org/archive.php?article_id=3015). The next day,
Slavyansk City Court placed him under house arrest until 20 January 2026.

It is unknown when the criminal cases against Fr Iona might reach court. In
the meantime, he is prohibited from leading worship, and the community
believes that a "surveillance vehicle is on duty near the church", the
church member outside Russia told Forum 18. In November 2025, investigators
had Fr Iona placed under house arrest until 20 January 2026.

Upon his release, Fr Iona "definitely had a concussion", the church member
outside Russia told Forum 18 on 5 January 2026. "He was vomiting for three
days after the beating." Although his physical health has since improved,
"I know he's depressed", another parishioner, Sergey, commented to
Caucasian Knot (https://www.kavkaz-uzel.eu/articles/419648) on 4 January
2026. "First, he was beaten. Second, the invasion of the church, the
searches, the confiscation of personal belongings and documents – this is
a severe trauma for a young man who lived by faith. Now he doesn't want
anything, he just prays. No appeals. There are appeals, but he will not
sign them. It's impossible to convince him otherwise."

Forum 18 wrote to Krasnodar Region Investigative Committee on 1 December
2025 to ask:

- which materials from the church website investigators are using as the
basis of their prosecution cases;

- and why they have banned Fr Iona from leading worship services.

Forum 18 also wrote to Krasnodar Region Investigative Committee and
Krasnodar Region National Guard on 1 December to ask why they had
considered it necessary to use physical violence against Fr Iona and
whether the alleged perpetrators had been suspended from duty and placed
under investigation.

Forum 18 had received no response to any of these enquiries by the middle
of the working day in Krasnodar Region of 16 January 2026.

Krasnodar Region: 2023 fine

Fr Iona was first fined
(https://www.forum18.org/archive.php?article_id=2872) under Administrative
Code Article 20.3.3 in November 2023 for an article entitled "The cult of
war". Archbishop Viktor Pivovarov was fined under Article 20.3.3 in March
2023, then under Criminal Code Article 280.3 for repeat "discreditation"
(https://www.forum18.org/archive.php?article_id=2904) in April 2024.

Viktor Ivanovich Pivovarov (born 8 February 1937) was ordained a priest in
the Russian Orthodox Church Outside Russia (ROCOR), which opened parishes
inside Russia in the early 1990s. In 2006, he became an Archbishop in the
Russian [Rossiyskaya] Orthodox Church (RosPTs), which was founded after a
series of splits within ROCOR. He now leads a rival branch of RosPTs which
he established in 2009 after a further split. It is not in communion with
either other parts of ROCOR or the Moscow Patriarchate.

Moscow: Appeal court upholds Orthodox journalist's detention in absentia

On 29 September 2025, the Investigative Committee in Moscow opened a case
(https://forum18.org/archive.php?article_id=3017) against Orthodox
journalist Kseniya Valeryevna Luchenko (born 13 June 1979) under Criminal
Code Article 207.3, Part 2 Paragraph d ("Public dissemination of knowingly
false information about the use of the Armed Forces of the Russian
Federation for reasons of political, ideological, racial, national or
religious hatred or enmity, or for reasons of hatred or enmity against any
social group"). This carries a maximum punishment of 10 years'
imprisonment.

Investigators initiated the case on the basis of a Telegram post in which
Luchenko condemned a Russian missile strike on a Kyiv children's hospital
in July 2024, and contrasted this with the Russian state and Moscow
Patriarchate's promotion of so-called "traditional values".

Although Luchenko left Russia in 2022, Moscow's Cheryomushki District Court
issued a detention order for her in absentia on 24 November 2025. Moscow
City Court upheld this decision on 23 December 2025. The initial 2-month
detention order will be up for renewal in late January.

According to Moscow City Court's written appeal decision, seen by Forum 18,
investigators initially decided on 2 October 2025 to place Luchenko under
travel restrictions. After discovering that she was in fact outside the
country, they had her added
(https://www.forum18.org/archive.php?article_id=3011) to the Interior
Ministry's Federal Wanted List on 22 October 2025. Investigators then
sought the court order to have her detained. This would see her immediately
arrested should she return to Russia (or travel to Belarus, Kazakhstan,
Tajikistan, Uzbekistan, or Russian-occupied parts of Ukraine).

The detention order is "effective from the moment of [Luchenko's] transfer
to the law enforcement authorities of the Russian Federation, in the case
of her extradition or deportation to the territory of the Russian
Federation, from the moment of her detention on the territory of the
Russian Federation, or from the moment of her detention on the territory of
the Russian Federation in case of voluntary entry into the territory of the
Russian Federation".

At the appeal hearing, Luchenko's lawyer Katerina Tertukhina argued that
Luchenko did not abscond, and that the district court had "failed to
consider that she had left the Russian Federation long before the
publication of the materials she is accused of and before the initiation of
criminal proceedings against her". The court had provided no grounds for
its conclusion that Luchenko would obstruct the criminal investigation and
had failed to take into account that she is "accused of a non-violent crime
and does not pose any public danger".

The appeal judges concluded, however, that the lower court had "reasonably
agreed with the investigative authorities' assertion of [Luchenko's]
involvement in the crime of which she is accused .. took into account the
circumstances and nature of the crime she is charged with, the fact that
she is accused of committing a serious crime against public safety, that
she has absconded and is on the international wanted list, and therefore
correctly concluded that it was necessary to place the accused in custody".

Luchenko is under investigation for a post she made on her Telegram channel
(https://t.me/orthozombies/901) on 8 July 2024, and a repost of the same
text (https://echofm.online/opinions/takie-vot-czennosti-svyatoj-rusi) on
the website of independent media outlet Ekho Moskvy on the same day.

The post reads: "The Russian Orthodox state [Rossiyskoye pravoslavnoye
gosudarstvo] celebrated 'The Day of Family, Love, and Fidelity', by
striking a children's hospital in Kyiv with a missile.

"And in Russia, a 'Family Parade' is underway. It began over the weekend,
but is taking place today in most cities. With daisies and the flags of the
World Congress of the Russian People. And with the active participation of
dioceses of the Russian Orthodox Church. They celebrate the festive
liturgy, then march in this ersatz procession of the cross [krestniy khod],
singing troparia [hymns], and then presenting medals to large families,
while bombs are falling on Ukrainian children. These are the 'values of
Holy Rus'."

On the morning of 8 July 2024, a Russian missile had hit the Okhmatdyt
children's hospital in Kyiv, injuring ten children
(https://www.hrw.org/news/2024/07/11/russias-july-8-attack-childrens-hospital-ukraine)
and destroying or severely damaging several departments.

In 2022, Russian President Vladimir Putin signed a decree designating 8
July "The Day of Family, Love, and Fidelity", "in order to preserve
traditional family values and the spiritual-moral education of children and
youth". (END)

More reports on freedom of thought, conscience and belief in Russia
(https://www.forum18.org/archive.php?country=10)

For background information see Forum 18's Russia religious freedom survey
(https://www.forum18.org/archive.php?article_id=2897)

Forum 18's compilation of Organisation for Security and Co-operation in
Europe (OSCE) freedom of religion or belief commitments
(https://www.forum18.org/archive.php?article_id=1351)

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