Hieromonk Iakov Vorontsov, former Russian Orthodox priest who was defrocked in 2023 after publicly criticizing Russia’s large-scale invasion of Ukraine, had already spent more than three months in detention when he was transferred by Kazakh authorities to a psychiatric facility in Almaty last week.
Vorontsov was arrested in February on drug charges that he and his supporters have called politically motivated. After his remand in custody, the former priest’s beard was shaved, his hair cut short and his Bible and prayer book were confiscated.
He is now forced to undergo a mandatory psychiatric evaluation while detained in a psychiatric facility, according to extracts from a court ruling. published on May 21 on Radio Azattyq, the Kazakh channel of RFE/RL. Under Kazakh law, the assessment period can last up to one month, but it can be extended further.
The decision, taken against Vorontsov’s wishes, was widely denounced by local human rights lawyers and advocacy groups, particularly because it evokes one of the Soviet Union’s most serious conflicts. infamous tools of political repression – punitive psychiatry.
But beyond the symbolism, Vorontsov’s legal representatives say the decision itself was issued in violation of several fundamental due process guarantees, including the right to self-defense.
“A trial was simply conducted and a decision was made to send [Vorontsov] “This is a mandatory examination,” Dias Akhmetov told The Diplomat, adding that neither he nor his co-lawyer Galym Nourpeisov were informed of the hearing at which the decision was made. They learned about it four days after it was published.
According to Akhmetov, he and Nurpeisov appealed the decision, but local authorities transferred Vorontsov to a psychiatric institution before their petition was considered.
Kazakhstan’s International Bureau for Human Rights and Rule of Law, the country’s leading human rights NGO, also sentenced the decision to incarcerate Vorontsov, arguing that the court committed a “serious violation” of the country’s criminal procedure law by failing to inform Vorontsov or his legal representatives of the hearing.
The organization also noted that Kazakhstan’s health legislation only allows for an involuntary psychiatric examination when there are signs that a person poses a danger to themselves or others — conditions that it said were not demonstrated in Vorontsov’s case.
Vorontsov’s lawyers and associates insist he shows no signs of mental illness.
A supporter of his movement, Geniyat Issin, note on social networks in April, the defrocked priest had “maintained a religious role in prison” and had convinced a cellmate not to commit suicide. Akhmetov, who saw Vorontsov shortly before his transfer to a psychiatric facility, described him to The Diplomat as being “in good health and good spirits.”
“As always, he spoke of God, of faith, of truth, of justice,” he said.
Vorontsov first rose to prominence in Kazakhstan after publicly condemning Russia’s full-scale invasion of Ukraine in 2022 and signing an anti-war deal. call by the Orthodox clergy and exhorting Kazakhstan will cease participation in the Collective Security Treaty Organization (CSTO) and the Eurasian Economic Union (EAEU), two international organizations led by Russia.
He then led a movement to register an Orthodox religious organization in Kazakhstan independent of the Russian Orthodox Church and petitioned the Ecumenical Patriarchate of Constantinople for autocephaly or self-governing status. The move would have severed all formal religious ties with Moscow and added Kazakhstan to a growing list of countries, including Ukraine And Estoniawhere two Orthodox churches exist simultaneously.
In December 2025 and January 2026, Vorontsov submitted documents to Kazakh authorities aimed at registering his religious organization. He has said it was repeatedly rejected by the Almaty Justice Ministry without explanation.
The Orthodox Church of Kazakhstan has long been under the jurisdiction of the Russian Orthodox Church. Orthodox priests must honor Kremlin-friendly Patriarch Kirill at church services, and his administrative structures depend primarily on Moscow.
“When the Church began to go down an unevangelical path, when its leaders began to campaign for Putin and deviate from the Gospel, I did not see how, as a Christian, I could continue to belong to this organization,” he said. explain to independent local media Vlast.kz last year.
For his supporters, Vorontsov represented an attempt to create a form of orthodoxy in Kazakhstan less tied to Moscow’s political agenda. However, criticism within the Russian Orthodox Church rejected his movement as schismatic and detrimental to “the spiritual health of society.”
Mid-January, a video message addressed to Kazakh President Kassym-Jomart Tokayev appeared on the Telegram channel of Archpriest Alexander Suvorov, a senior cleric of the Orthodox Church of Kazakhstan, in which several local Orthodox priests requested the initiation of criminal proceedings against Vorontsov for “inciting interfaith hatred”, an offense punishable by up to seven years in prison.
A month later, local authorities detained Vorontsov after police said drugs were found during a nighttime search of his Almaty apartment. Initially sentenced to 10 days of detention for non-medical drug use, he was later charged with drug possession and “keeping a drug den.” Vorontsov denies any wrongdoing.
In March, the U.S. Commission on International Religious Freedom Understood Vorontsov on a list of individuals allegedly persecuted for their religious beliefs.
