Prosecutors have asked the court to sentence former Schema-Hegumen Sergii (Nikolai) Romanov to four years in prison, Interfax reported on Monday, November 29.
Romanov’s trial is taking place at the Izmailovsky District Court in Moscow. The ex-communicated Orthodox priest stands accused of arbitrariness, violating the right to freedom of conscience and religion, and incitement to suicide.
According to investigators, Romanov urged believers to commit suicide under the guise of spreading Christian ideology. He also stands accused of obstructing a property survey of the Sredneuralsk Women’s Monastery — an institution Romanov seized in June 2020 — and of preventing representatives of the Russian Orthodox Church from accessing the monastery’s grounds, thereby preventing the conduct of religious ceremonies.
Sergii Romanov is a former Schema-Hegumen of the Russian Orthodox Church and one of the most well known priests in Russia’s Ural region. In the spring of 2020, he was banned from conducting religious services due to his radical views on the coronavirus epidemic.
In June 2020, Sergii Romanov seized the Sredneuralsk Women’s Monastery, a convent outside of Yekaterinburg, and overthrew the Mother Superior. He continued to conduct religious services and was ex-communicated in October 2020. A SWAT team stormed the Sredneuralsk Monastery and arrested Sergii Romanov in December 2020.
read more about Sergii Romanov
- Ignoring the Church’s calls Defrocked Orthodox priest Sergii Romanov arrested during raid on monastery
- The exorcist How a confessed murderer became one of Russia’s most famous priests, took over a convent, and started cursing the Church and the state
- Fighting the ‘satanic regime’ After falling out with the Russian Orthodox Church over COVID-19, a dissident priest seizes a convent in the Urals
- ‘Behave like adults’ Russia’s Sverdlovsk Region is among those hardest hit by the coronavirus. Regional authorities are blaming local residents.