BRUSSELS (Reuters) – The European Commission has proposed freezing the assets of Patriarch Kirill, head of the Russian Orthodox Church, a diplomat said on Wednesday.
The Patriarch has been added to a draft blacklist that already includes hundreds of military officers and businessmen close to the Kremlin whom the EU accuses of supporting the war in Ukraine.
The sanction, which would entail an asset freeze and a travel ban, needs the backing of EU states to be adopted.
EU diplomats are set to meet this week to discuss the sanction, which is part of a wider package proposed by the European Commission earlier on Wednesday including an oil embargo and restrictions on Russian banks.
A first meeting of EU envoys on Wednesday ended without a deal, mostly because of some countries’ criticism of the oil ban and other oil-related measures, such as a ban on EU shipping services for Russian oil, officials said.
Earlier in the day, the Russian Orthodox Church scolded Pope Francis after he urged the Patriarch not to become the Kremlin’s “altar boy”, telling the Vatican that such remarks would hurt dialogue between the churches.
(Reporting by Francesco Guarascio; Editing by Andrew Cawthorne and Hugh Lawson)