Vasyl Poraiko

Ukrainian Soviet statesman and lawyer
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Vasyl Ivanovych Poraiko (Ukrainian: Василь Іванович Порайко; 12 October 1888, Ustea, now in Kolomyia Raion, Ivano-Frankivsk, Ukraine - 25 October 1937) was a Ukrainian Soviet statesman and lawyer.

Biography

He studied at Chernivtsi University and Lviv University, graduating in 1914. On the outbreak of World War I he was recruited into the Austro-Hungarian Army, but was captured by the Russians in 1915. He supported the October Revolution of 1917 and in 1919 was sent to Ukraine, where he took part in the foundation of the Ukrainian SSR, acting as its second Prosecutor General from 1927 to 1930 and People's Commissar of Justice.

He was arrested by the NKVD charges of participation in the "bourgeois-nationalist anti-Soviet organization of the former Borotbists " and "the Ukrainian Military Organisation". He was shot in October, 1937 and posthumously rehabilitated in 1957.[1]

References

  1. ^ "Senkiv Mikhailo, Duminets Ivan: From the history of struggle for the unity of the Ukrainian lands 1917-1945 rr". Archived from the original on 2016-04-06.

Sources

  • http://ruthenia.info/txt/vidrodzhenia/dumynetsi/ Archived 2016-04-06 at the Wayback Machine
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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 Skrypnyk • Vasyl Poraiko • Vasiliy PolyakovMykhailo MykhailykArkadiy Kiselyov • Khoma Radchenko • Mykola Babchenko • Denys PanasyukFedir Hlukh • Kateryna Zghurska • Volodymyr Zaichuk • Vitaliy Boiko
Ukraine
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Ukraine
(1917–1918)
  • Dmytro Markovych
  • Serhiy Shelukhin
  • Mykhailo Chubynskyi
  • Oleksiy Romanov
  • Andriy Viazlov
  • Viktor Reinbot
Soviet Ukraine
(1922–1991)
Ukraine
(since 1991)


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