Ukraine rabbi says a listening devices found at Kiev synagogue
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Ukraine rabbi says a listening devices found at Kiev synagogue

One of two Orthodox leaders in the city warn that secret recording and surveillance devises discovered at main shul

Brodsky Synagogue in Kiev, Ukraine. 

Picture from Ukrainian Wikipedia.
Brodsky Synagogue in Kiev, Ukraine. Picture from Ukrainian Wikipedia.

Secret recording devices and other surveillance activities were discovered at one of Kiev’s main synagogues, according to a chief rabbi of Ukraine who said this “discredits the state.”

Moshe Azman, one of two chief Orthodox rabbis in Ukraine, on Tuesday announced the discovery this month in a statement.

The synagogue’s own security task force discovered individuals who “professionally carried out a covert surveillance of the premises and visitors of the Kiev Central Synagogue on 13 Shota Rustaveli Street,” Azman wrote.

The bugs were found in subsequent sweeps inside the “house of God,” as Azman called the synagogue in protest of the alleged surveillance activity there.

“I am obliged to emphasise my deep concern about actions that not only compromise our community and are manifestations of antisemitism, but also discredit the nation as a whole,” he added.

Azman’s crew informed not only Ukrainian authorities about the discovery but also Israeli officials, he said. He said he suspected “high-level law-enforcement officials” in Ukraine  of mounting the surveillance operation.

Azman demanded an explanation from the government and legal action against the initiators of the alleged surveillance operation.

Under communism, Jewish communities and individuals came under constant surveillance in the former Soviet Union, to which Ukraine used to belong.

In his statement, Azman also said that his and other Jewish communities have spoken out against Russian propaganda that uses antisemitism to discredit Ukraine.

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