Vasyl Durdynets

Ukrainian politician and diplomat

Василь Дурдинець
Durdynets in 1999
Vice-Prime Minister of Ukraine on Matters of State Security and EmergenciesIn office
3 July 1995 – 18 June 1996Prime MinisterYevhen MarchukFirst Vice Prime Minister of UkraineIn office
18 June 1996 – 30 July 1997Prime MinisterPavlo LazarenkoPreceded byPavlo LazarenkoSucceeded byAnatoliy HolubchenkoActing Prime Minister of Ukraine (ex officio)In office
2 July 1997[1] – 30 July 1997[1]PresidentLeonid KuchmaPreceded byPavlo LazarenkoSucceeded byValeriy PustovoitenkoDirector of the National Bureau of InvestigationsIn office
July 1997 – March 1999PresidentLeonid KuchmaPreceded byOleh LytvakSucceeded byoffice dissolvedMinister on matters of Emergencies and population security from consequences of the Chernobyl DisasterIn office
22 March 1999 – 30 November 2002Prime MinisterValeriy Pustovoitenko
Viktor Yushchenko
Anatoliy KinakhPreceded byValeriy KalchenkoSucceeded byHryhoriy Reva6th Ambassador of Ukraine to HungaryIn office
2 December 2002[2] – 15 July 2003[2]Preceded byOrest KlimpushSucceeded byYuriy Mushka4th Ambassador of Ukraine to SloveniaIn office
2 December 2002[2] – 15 July 2003[2]Preceded byOrest KlimpushSucceeded byIvan HnatyshynPeople's Deputy of Ukraine1st convocationIn office
15 May 1990[3] – 10 May 1994[3]ConstituencyCommunist Party of Ukraine, Kirovohrad Oblast, District No.230[3]2nd convocationIn office
10 May 1994[4] – 3 September 1996[4]ConstituencyIndependent, Kirovohrad Oblast, District No.229[4] Personal detailsBorn (1937-09-27) 27 September 1937 (age 86)
Romočevica, Czechoslovakia (now Romochevytsia, Mukachevo Raion, Zakarpattia Oblast, Ukraine)

Major General Vasyl Vasylovych Durdynets (Ukrainian: Василь Васильович Дурдинець; born 27 September 1937)[1] is a Ukrainian politician and diplomat. He served as Acting Prime Minister of Ukraine during a short period in July 1997.[1]

Biography and career

Vasyl Durdynets was born into peasant family in Czechoslovakia before World War II. In 1960 he graduated the Law faculty of Ivano Franko Lviv State University. In 1958 through 1970 Durdynets was an active member of the Komsomol of Ukraine (1958–1966) and Komsomol (1966–1970) in Lviv, Moscow, and Kyiv. In 1970 he became a staff member of the Lviv regional committee of the Communist Party of Ukraine.

In 1978 Durdynets was appointed a deputy and in 1982 he became the first deputy Minister of Internal Affairs of Ukraine, holding the post until February 1991.[1] In March 1990 he was elected as a parliamentary to the Verkhovna Rada (first convocation) as member of the Communist Party of the Soviet Union winning the 230th electoral district in Bobrynets, Kirovohrad Oblast.[1] At the first (12th) convocation, Durdynets headed the parliamentary commission on matters of defense and state security and was a non-affiliated member of parliament.[3] Since 29 January 1992 in Verkhovna Rada Durdynets served as vice-speaker (first deputy head).

To the next convocation Durdynets was reelected as non-affiliated at the 229th electoral district in the same city. At the second convocation Durdynets was a leader of deputy group "Center" and the parliamentary commission on fight with organized crime and corruption. Simultaneously he also served as the first deputy chairman of the Presidential coordination committee in fight with corruption and organized crime.

In July 1995 he rose to the position of Vice-Prime Minister in State Security and Extraordinary Situations and the chairman of Presidential Committee in fight of corruption and organized crime. The following year he became first Vice-Prime Minister (18 June 1996) in the Cabinet of the scandalous Pavlo Lazarenko.[1] After serving a brief term as an acting Prime Minister, he was dismissed and appointed the director of the country's National Investigation Bureau (30 July 1997), while continuing to serve as the chairman of Presidential Committee in fight of corruption and organized crime. In 1996 Durdynets became an initiator in creating of the Ministry of Emergencies and matters of population security from consequences of the Chernobyl Disaster. Since 22 March 1999 he served as a Minister of Extraordinary Situations .[1][5]

Since 1997 Vasyl Durdynets was promoted to the rank of a general of Internal Affairs Service of Ukraine.

In August 1997 he was admitted to the Council of National Security and Defense of Ukraine (RNBO). On 17 February 2000 he became a member of the government committee in the reformation of the agrarian sector and in the affairs of ecology and extraordinary situations.

In 2002 Durdynets unsuccessfully ran for parliament in the 73rd electoral district in Zakarpattia Oblast as non-affiliated politician.

His state's awards include 5th and 4th Classes of the Order of Prince Yaroslav the Wise, 3rd Class of the Order of Merit, Order of the Red Banner of Labour, Order of the Badge of Honour, Order for Personal Courage, and Personal Firing Weapon.

On 25 April 2011 the President of Ukraine Viktor Yanukovych awarded Durdynets the "Distinguished Juror of Ukraine" as an advisor of the Ministry of Internal Affairs, a participant in the liquidation of consequences of Chernobyl disaster, and a general of Internal Service of Ukraine.[6]

Durdynets is an honorary professor of the National Academy of Internal Affairs.

See also

References

  1. ^ a b c d e f g h "DURDYNETS, Vasyl Vasylyovych", Government Portal (Ukraine Government), retrieved 5 February 2010
  2. ^ a b c d Vasyl Durdynets at the Association of Transcarpathians in Kyiv
  3. ^ a b c d Profile at the Verkhovna Rada website
  4. ^ a b c Profile at the Verkhovna Rada website
  5. ^ "Chornobyl's 'evil' still lives – 13 years later", The Record, 26 April 1999, retrieved 5 February 2010
  6. ^ (in Ukrainian) Presidential Decree #501/2011 "For distinguishing with the state awards of Ukraine" Archived 14 August 2014 at the Wayback Machine

External links

  • Personal website (empty)
Political offices
Preceded by Prime Minister of Ukraine (acting)
July 1997
Succeeded by
  • v
  • t
  • e
Ukrainian People's Republic
(1917–1920)Council of MinistersGovernment (in exile)
Ukraine
  • Andriy Livytskyi
  • Pylyp Pylypchuk
  • Andriy Livytskyi
  • Vyacheslav Prokopovych
  • Oleksander Shulhyn
  • Vyacheslav Prokopovych
  • Andriy Yakovliv
  • Kostiantyn Pankivskyi
  • Isaak Mazepa
  • Stepan Baran
  • Spyrydon Dovhal
  • Symon Sozontiv
  • Mykola Livytskyi
  • Spyrydon Dovhal
  • Atanas Figol
  • Spyrydon Dovhal
  • Vasyl Fedoronchuk
  • Teofil Leontiy
  • Ivan Kedryn-Rudnytskyi
  • Teofil Leontiy
  • Yaroslav-Bohdan Rudnytsky
  • Ivan Samiylenko
  • Cabinet of Ministers
    1 denotes acting
    • v
    • t
    • e
    Prime-minister: Viktor Yushchenko
    First vice-premier-minister: Yuriy Yekhanurov
    Vice-premier-minister on issues of fuel and energy complex: Yulia Tymoshenko
    Vice-premier-minister: Mykhailo Hladiy
    Vice-premier-minister: Mykola Zhulynskyi
    Agrarian policyIvan Kyrylenko
    Internal affairsYuriy Kravchenko
    Yuriy Smyrnov
    Ecology and
    Natural resources
    Ivan Zayets
    EconomySerhiy Tihipko
    Vasyl Rohovyi
    Foreign affairsBorys Tarasyuk
    Anatoliy Zlenko
    Culture and ArtsBohdan Stupka
    Emergency and protection of
    population from consequences
    of the Chernobyl disaster
    Vasyl Durdynets
    DefenseOleksandr Kuzmuk
    Education and ScienceVasyl Kremen
    HealthcareRaisa Bohatyriova
    Vitaliy Moskalenko
    Fuel and EnergySerhiy Yermilov
    Labor and Social policyIvan Sakhan
    TransportationLeonid Kostyuchenko
    FinanceIhor Mityukov
    JusticeSuzanna Stanik


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