Vasyl Onopenko

Ukrainian judge and politician

  • SDPU(o), No. 3 (1998–2002)
  • Yulia Tymoshenko Bloc, No. 4 (2002–2006)
Minister of JusticeIn office
27 October 1992 – 7 August 1995President
  • Leonid Kravchuk
  • Leonid Kuchma
Prime Minister
  • Leonid Kuchma
  • Vitaliy Masol
Preceded byVolodymyr KampoSucceeded bySerhiy Holovatyi Personal detailsBorn (1949-04-10) 10 April 1949 (age 75)
Velyki Kryshlentsi, Ukrainian SSR, Soviet Union (now Ukraine)Political partyIndependent (1998, 2002, since 2012)Other political
affiliations
  • Party of Human Rights (1994–1995)
  • Social Democratic Party of Ukraine (united) (1995–1998)
  • Ukrainian Social Democratic Party (1998–2012)
  • Batkivshchyna (1999–2002)
  • Yulia Tymoshenko Bloc (2002–2006)
Alma materKharkiv Law InstituteOccupationJurist, politician

Vasyl Vasylovych Onopenko (Ukrainian: Василь Васильович Онопенко; born 10 April 1949) is a Ukrainian judge and politician who served as chairman of the Supreme Court of Ukraine from 2006 to 2011. Prior to this, he served as a People's Deputy of Ukraine from 1998 to 2006, as Minister of Justice from 1992 to 1995, and as a judge of the Supreme Court of Ukraine within the Soviet Union from 1985 to 1991.

Biography

Onopenko is from Vinnytsia Oblast. He graduated the Kharkiv Law Institute in 1975 and later a candidate dissertation in 1994. In 1976-1981 Onopenko was a judge of the Lityn Raion court, later in the Chernihiv Oblast court. In 1985-1991 he was a judge of the Supreme Court of Ukraine.

In 1992 he was appointed a Minister of Justice of Ukraine (Kuchma government, Second Masol government). At the post in 1994 Onopenko created own political party, the Party of Human Rights. Sometime in 1995 his party was united with Social Democratic Party of Ukraine and Ukrainian Party of Justice into Social Democratic Party of Ukraine (united). He was elected the chairman of the newly created political party.[1] Due to inadequate investigation of events of July 1995 (related to burial of Volodymyr (Romaniuk)), in August 1995 Onopenko resigned.

Soon after being elected to the Verkhovna Rada (Ukrainian parliament) in 1998, Onopenko was excluded from SDPU(u) and created yet another party, the Ukrainian Social Democratic Party. Onopenko joined the independent group in the Verkhovna Rada and then Batkivshchyna. In the 1999 Ukrainian presidential election, he unsuccessfully ran for the presidency.

During the 2002 Ukrainian parliamentary election Onopenko returned to the Verkhovna Rada as the fourth candidate on the party list of the Yulia Tymoshenko Bloc. Soon after being elected, for a short time he was unaffiliated, but then rejoined the parliamentary faction.

For the 2006 Ukrainian parliamentary election he was again 4th on the party list of the Yulia Tymoshenko Bloc. Later Onopenko resigned as a People's Deputy of Ukraine after being elected to chairman of the Supreme Court of Ukraine. At the end of 2006 his son-in-law replaced him as a leader of the Ukrainian Social Democratic Party.

Onopenko quit the Ukrainian Social Democratic Party after Natalia Korolevska changed it to Ukraine – Forward! in 2012.

In the 2012 Ukrainian parliamentary election, Onopenko was an unsuccessful independent candidate for People's Deputy of Ukraine in Ukraine's 14th electoral district.[2]

References

  1. ^ Yuliya Mostova, Serhiy Rakhmanin. Partisan Ukraine. Part VI Social Democratic Party of Ukraine (united) (УКРАИНА ПАРТИЙНАЯ. ЧАСТЬ VI СОЦИАЛ-ДЕМОКРАТИЧЕСКАЯ ПАРТИЯ УКРАИНЫ (ОБЪЕДИНЕННАЯ)). The Mirror Weekly. 15 March 2002
  2. ^ 14th electoral district. Central Election Commission of Ukraine. 2012

External links

  • Vasyl Onopenko at the Official Ukraine Today
Government offices
Preceded by
Volodymyr Kampo
Minister of Justice of Ukraine
1992–1995
Succeeded by
Political offices
New creation Leader of the Party of Human Rights
1994–1995
Party was merged
Preceded by
Yuriy Buzduhan
as Leader of merged party
Leader of the Social Democratic Party of Ukraine (united)
1995–1998
Succeeded by
New title Leader of the Ukrainian Social Democratic Party
1998–2006
Succeeded by
Court offices
Preceded by
Vasyl Malyarenko
Chairperson of the Supreme Court of Ukraine
2006–2011
Succeeded by
  • v
  • t
  • e
Ministers of Justice of Ukraine
Ukraine
(1917–1920)
Valentyn Sadovskyi (court affairs) • Serhiy Shelukhin (court affairs) • Mykhailo Chubynskyi • Oleksiy Romanov • Andriy Viazlov • Viktor Reinbot • Serhiy Shelukhin (acting) • Viktor Prykhodko • Hryhoriy Syrotenko • Dmytro Markovych • Andriy Livytskyi
West Ukraine
(1918–1919)
Sydir Holubovych (court affairs) • Osyp Burachynskyi (court affairs)
Soviet Ukraine
(1918–1991)
Aleksandr Khmelnitskiy • Mykhailo Lebedynets • Yevhen Terletskyi • Sergei Buzdalin • Mikhail Vetoshkin • Mykola SkrypnykVasyl PoraikoVasiliy PolyakovMykhailo MykhailykArkadiy Kiselyov • Khoma Radchenko • Mykola Babchenko • Denys PanasyukFedir Hlukh • Kateryna Zghurska • Volodymyr Zaichuk • Vitaliy Boiko
Ukraine
  • v
  • t
  • e
Chair of the Supreme Court of Ukraine
Soviet Ukraine
(1923–1991)
Sergei Buzdalin • Mykhailo Lebedynets • Frants Mazur • Semen Krupko • Herman Zavitskyi • Grigoriy Zhelyeznogorskiy • Fedir Shumiatskyi • Kostiantyn Topchiy • Petro Noshchenko • Fedir Hlukh • Volodymyr Zaichuk • Oleksandr Yakymenko
Ukraine
Oleksandr Yakymenko • Heorhiy Butenko • Vitaliy Boiko • Vasyl Maliarenko • Vasyl Onopenko • Petro Pylypchuk • Yaroslav Romaniuk • Valentyna DanishevskaVsevolod Kniaziev
  • v
  • t
  • e
Winner
Lost in runoff
Other candidates
Withdrew
  • Volodymyr Oliynyk
  • Oleksandr Tkachenko