The mayor of Yekaterinburg has rejected a proposal by the region’s governor to cancel the construction of a cathedral at a downtown public park. Alexander Vysokinsky says he’s not yet ready to remove October Square from the list of possible sites for St. Catherine’s Cathedral, and still wants to make it an option in an upcoming citywide poll that’s intended to resolve the controversy once and for all.
Vysokinsky has promised to discuss the issue with Sverdlovsk Governor Yevgeny Kuivashev, who a day earlier asked him to remove October Square Park from the list of potential construction sites, following a new sociological study by the state-run agency VTSIOM, which found that 74 percent of the city’s inhabitants think the current site is a poor choice. Members of the Yekaterinburg Diocese have supported Mayor Vysokinsky’s position.
On May 13, unpermitted protests erupted in response to the start of construction of a new cathedral in Yekaterinburg’s October Square Park (one of the few public spaces in the center of the city). Three days later, Vladimir Putin publicly suggested polling local residents to measure support for the project. Hours later, city officials endorsed the idea. The mayor’s office subsequently suspended construction work and dismantled the wall around the site.
Follow Meduza's coverage of these protests
- ‘We woke up in an occupied city’ Sverdlovsk's governor spends two hours in negotiations with protesters, and here's how that turned out
- St. Catherine’s Cathedral LLC Two billionaires are bankrolling a controversial construction project in Yekaterinburg, and just wait until you see the multifunctional center they've got planned for across the street
- Yekaterinburg protesters get a survey, but not a referendum. What difference will it make?
- The ‘Ural Hulk’ and friends: We identified the trained fighters trying to break up protests in Yekaterinburg
- The songs of a city in protest What Yekaterinburg and its musicians are singing and saying about the fight against a new cathedral