Montenegro: Amendments to Fix Anti-Orthodox Law Are Ready

Pravmir.com team | 12 December 2020

The text of the amended law on religious freedom is ready to be considered by the Montenegrin government next week, said Dr. Vladimir Leposavić, the Minister of Justice and Human and Minority Rights.

The law on religious freedom, initially adopted last year under the government of President Milo Đukanović and Prime Minister Duško Marković, gave the government the authority to confiscate important properties from the Serbian Orthodox Church. The President openly supported the miniscule “Montenegrin Orthodox Church,” a schismatic group that rejects the canonical Serbian Orthodox Church.

The law proved to be quite scandalous and unpopular, and citizens of Montenegro began to take to the streets by the hundreds of thousands to protest the persecution of their Church. In the elections in August, the Đukanović government finally lost power after 30 years, as an opposition coalition took a majority of parliamentary seats.

The new government declared that amending the law to end the persecution of the Serbian Church would be its top priority. The new government came into power on December 4.

“The text of the amendments to the law on religious freedom is ready and the disputed articles of this act have been deleted and amended. The proposed amendments to the law will be decided urgently by the government early next week and then forwarded to the Assembly for approval, which will fulfill the pre-election promise of the new government,” said Minister Leposavić, reports Romfea.

The date of the parliamentary vote has not been set, Leposavić noted, adding that the law must first be passed by the Legislature and the Committee on Human and Minority Rights.

Since you are here…

…we do have a small request. More and more people visit Orthodoxy and the World website. However, resources for editorial are scarce. In comparison to some mass media, we do not make paid subscription. It is our deepest belief that preaching Christ for money is wrong.

Having said that, Pravmir provides daily articles from an autonomous news service, weekly wall newspaper for churches, lectorium, photos, videos, hosting and servers. Editors and translators work together towards one goal: to make our four websites possible - Pravmir.ru, Neinvalid.ru, Matrony.ru and Pravmir.com. Therefore our request for help is understandable.

For example, 5 euros a month is it a lot or little? A cup of coffee? It is not that much for a family budget, but it is a significant amount for Pravmir.

If everyone reading Pravmir could donate 5 euros a month, they would contribute greatly to our ability to spread the word of Christ, Orthodoxy, life's purpose, family and society.