Masked Soldiers Seize Pastor And Wife In Russian-Occupied Mariupol

 

War damage in Mariupol in March 2022. Creative Commons photo by Wanderer777.

Armed and masked soldiers have detained Pastor Leonid Ponomaryov, pastor of a Baptist Council of Churches congregation in Russian-occupied Mariupol, and his wife Tatyana. They took them from their home on the evening of Sept. 21. Family and church members have been unable to find out since who took the Ponomaryovs and why, or where they are now being held.

Neighbors “distinctly heard groans and cries” as the masked men took Leonid and Tatyana away “in an unknown direction,” local Baptists said. The two were initially taken to the police station and told that they would be held until the Russian-controlled referendum on the status of Donetsk Region was over. However, they were not released when the referendum concluded on Sept. 27.

Russia illegally annexed the Donetsk People’s Republic on Oct. 5, retaining the name.

Russian officials had initially claimed the couple had been involved in “extremist activity” and searched the Baptist church. They sealed the church to prevent future meetings for worship to be held. Some other Protestant churches — including at least one other local Council of Churches Baptist congregation — are still able to meet for worship in Mariupol, though others have been forcibly closed.

Forum 18 has been unable to find out who has seized Pastor Leonid Ponomaryov and his wife, or why. The duty officer at the Donetsk People’s Republic State Security Ministry — who did not give his name — referred all inquiries to the police. “For kidnappings, if that is the case, you should go to the police,” he told Forum 18 on 6 Oct. Told that armed and masked men in army uniform took the couple, the officer repeated his response.

The duty officer at the Russian-controlled police of Mariupol’s Kalmiusky (Ilichivsky) District, where the Ponomaryovs live, refused to answer any questions. “We can’t give any information by phone,” she told Forum 18 on Oct. 6. She refused to put Forum 18 through to or give a phone number for Pavel Sotnikov, the district police chief. The telephone at Mariupol City Police went unanswered each time Forum 18 called on Oct. 6.

The woman who answered the phone of the Missing Persons Department of the DPR Human Rights Ombudsperson’s Office in Donetsk, who would not give her name, said that she could not provide information to third parties. “We have a law on the protection of personal data,” she told Forum 18 on Oct. 6. “Only relatives can appeal to our office and must do so in writing.”

The press officer at the Ombudsperson’s Office in Donetsk, who gave her name only as Inna, referred all inquiries about the Ponomaryovs to the police. She refused to discuss anything else on Oct. 6, as Forum 18 is not accredited as a news outlet with the DPR authorities.

The telephone of the DPR General Prosecutor’s Office in Donetsk went unanswered each time Forum 18 called on Oct. 6.

In an Oct. 3 statement to its members and congregations internationally, the International Council of Churches asked for appeals for the Ponomaryovs to be sent “ONLY from churches of the Russian Federation.”

Searching and sealing places of worship, expelling church members

Mariupol, in Ukraine’s Donetsk Region, was the location of bitter fighting following Russia’s renewed invasion of Ukraine, which was launched in February 2022. The city was finally occupied by Russian troops and forces of the Russian-backed Donetsk People’s Republic in May 2022.

Since then, Russian or DPR officials and soldiers in newly occupied parts of the Donetsk region have conducted searches in and sealed places of worship, confiscated equipment, demanded documents and, in at least one case, forcibly expelled church members from their building. They have also pressured some religious leaders to cut ties with Ukrainian religious bodies and link with those in Russia (see forthcoming F18News article).

Russian officials and soldiers have conducted similar raids and searches and enforced closures of places of worship in other regions of Ukraine they have occupied in their 2022 war. They have also pressured some religious leaders to cut ties with Ukrainian religious bodies and link with those in Russia or Russian-occupied Crimea (see forthcoming F18News article).

The war that followed Russia’s 2022 invasion of Ukraine has also seen many places of worship destroyed or damaged. Russian forces have seized many religious leaders of a variety of religious communities. It remains unclear in most of these cases, however, if places of worship or religious leaders were specifically targeted to punish the exercise of freedom of religion or belief (see forthcoming F18News article).

Severe restrictions since 2014 on exercise of the right to freedom of religion or belief

Raid on Jehovah’s Witness Kingdom Hall, Alchevsk, Donetsk, in August 2017. Photo via Jehovah’s Witnesses.

Pro-Russian rebels seized parts of Ukraine’s Donetsk Region in April 2014 and proclaimed what they called the Donetsk People’s Republic. Heavy fighting ensued. Until the February 2022 Russian invasion of Ukraine, the rebel administration controlled nearly half of Ukraine’s Donetsk Region.

After 2014, Mariupol remained in Ukrainian government hands until the February 2022 Russian invasion. As of early October 2022, Russian and DPR forces control about 60% of Ukraine’s Donetsk Region.

Since 2014, the internationally unrecognized DPR authorities have imposed severe restrictions on all exercise of the right to freedom of religion or belief.

The internationally unrecognized DPR entity’s June 2016 religion law did not explicitly ban exercising freedom of religion or belief without official permission but did impose other restrictions against international human rights standards. In outlining procedures for gaining official permission to exist, the religion law presumed that such permission was required. An April 2018 religion law amendment required all non-Moscow Patriarchate religious organizations to reregister by March 1, 2019. The amendment specifically banned religious organizations from functioning if they failed to get reregistration by the deadline.

Officials routinely deny registration to disfavored religious communities on arbitrary grounds. Religious communities have been raided and religious leaders fined. In summer 2021, DPR prosecutors and courts banned three Protestant churches.

The DPR authorities have seized numerous places of worship and used them for their own purposes.

Soldiers visit Mariupol church, seize pastor during worship meeting

Since Russian forces occupied Mariupol, Russian police had several times visited the home of Leonid Ponomaryov and his wife Tatyana in the Kalmiusky (Ilichivsky) district of northern Mariupol. They had also summoned him for questioning more than once. Ponomaryov leads one of the congregations in the city of the Council of Churches Baptists.

Council of Churches Baptists do not seek official permission to exist in any of the countries where they operate. Their places of worship are therefore unregistered and are the private property of one or more church members.

In early September, military personnel came to Pastor Ponomaryov’s church in Kurchatov Street in the northeast part of the city. They asked church members to open the church for the Russian-backed authorities to hold the referendum for Ukraine’s Donetsk Region to join Russia, held from Sept. 23 to 27. Church members refused, noted Voice of the Martyrs Korea, which maintains contacts with local Christians. The authorities then sealed the church building.

Church members reopened the church for their regular Sunday meeting for worship. However, military personnel returned during the worship service and took away Pastor Ponomaryov, who was leading the service, Voice of the Martyrs Korea added.

The military personnel also inspected religious literature at the church but appear not to have found anything “extremist.”

After the service, church members went to the military office with documents proving that the house is private property. They noted that according to the proposed DPR referendum law adopted on Sept. 20, the referendum should be held in premises provided by the authorities, not in a private home. The authorities looked at the documents and released Pastor Ponomaryov.

Armed and masked soldiers seize pastor and wife

On the evening of Sept. 21, a group of armed and masked men in Russian or DPR military uniforms arrived at the Ponomaryovs’ home in cars with no number plates. “Seeing the military vehicles without numbers, neighbors started to come out onto the street to find out what had happened,” local Baptists noted on Oct. 3. “But they were ordered to return home and not to come out.”

The armed men remained in the Ponomaryovs’ home for about two and a half hours. By then it was dark, but “the neighbors distinctly heard groans and cries” as the masked men took Leonid and Tatyana away “in an unknown direction,” local Baptists said.

On Sept. 22, church members tried to find out the whereabouts of Leonid and Tatyana Ponomaryov. “But neither then nor on subsequent days could they get any answers,” local Baptists lamented. An officer of the Russian Interior Ministry told relatives that they should not worry as they would be freed immediately after the referendum, which concluded on Sept. 27.

Also on Sept. 22, officials of the Russian occupation forces raided and searched the Kurchatov Street Baptist Church, seizing religious literature and sealing the building, local Baptists noted.

Some other Protestant churches — including at least one other Council of Churches Baptist congregation — are still able to meet for worship in Mariupol. Another Council of Churches congregation held its Harvest Festival worship service on Sunday, Oct. 2, “despite the recent events,” local Baptists noted.

Church members search for missing pastor and wife

On Sept. 30, two pastors from the Russian city of Rostov-on-Don traveled to Mariupol to try to find out where Leonid and Tatyana Ponomaryov are being held and why they were seized. Together with Leonid’s brother Viktor Ponomaryov, they visited the DPR State Security Ministry, military headquarters, prosecutor’s office and police. “But at all these agencies they received the almost identical response: ‘They’re not here, and we don’t know where they are.’”

The three then traveled to Donetsk to try to get answers from the DPR Interior Ministry and State Security Ministry secret police. “There too they were given exactly the same answers,” local Baptists noted. The three then lodged a written application to the DPR Interior Ministry. “The application was accepted and they were promised an answer within 30 days.”

As the three men were returning to Mariupol from Donetsk, police phoned them and asked them to go to Leonid and Tatyana Ponomaryov’s home. Present at the home were several investigators. “They questioned his brother Viktor and the neighbors, wrote it down in brief and then left,” local Baptists said. Officers had refused to say if the family would receive any answers.

“In all their meetings with officials of various entities, when church members asked them to identify themselves none of the representatives of the authorities would give their name, rank or position,” church members noted.

Children appeal for seized parents

On Oct. 1, the Ponomaryovs’ children issued a statement thanking church members for prayers for their parents. “For 10 days already we know nothing about them,” they wrote. “A group of church members from Mariupol and Rostov went round all the agencies and institutions, not only in Mariupol but in the regional centre (Donetsk), and were told nothing about our parents anywhere.”

The Ponomaryovs’ children added that various churches were praying for their parents and fasting on Oct. 2 and 3. They asked for information to be spread widely.

In an Oct. 3 statement to its members and congregations internationally, the International Council of Churches asked for appeals for the Ponomaryovs to be sent “ONLY from churches of the Russian Federation.”

This piece is republished from Forum 18.