Yevhen Kushnaryov

Yevhen Petrovych Kushnaryov (Ukrainian: Євген Петрович Кушнарьов, Jevhen Petrovyč Kušnar'ov) (January 29, 1951 – January 17, 2007) was Ukrainian politician. Kushnaryov was considered one of the chief ideologues of the Party of Regions and a key ally of Prime Minister Viktor Yanukovych.

Yevhen Kushnaryov
Євген Кушнарьов
Member of the Verkhovna Rada
In office
25 May 2006  17 January 2007
Chairman of the Kharkiv Oblast Council
In office
26 November 2004  27 January 2005
Preceded byOleksiy Kolesnyk
Succeeded byOleh Shapovalov
3rd Governor of Kharkiv Oblast
In office
27 October 2000  17 December 2004
Preceded byOleh Dyomin
Succeeded byStepan Maselsky
Head of the Presidential Administration
In office
20 December 1996  23 November 1998
Preceded byDmytro Tabachnyk
Succeeded byMykola Biloblotskyi
1st Mayor of Kharkiv
In office
15 May 1990  April 1996
Succeeded byMykhaylo Pylypchuk
Member of the Verkhovna Rada
In office
15 May 1990  10 May 1994
Personal details
Born(1951-01-29)January 29, 1951
Kharkiv, Ukrainian SSR, Soviet Union
DiedJanuary 17, 2007(2007-01-17) (aged 55)
Izium, Ukraine

Early life

Yevhen Kushnaryov was born in Kharkiv to migrants from Russia in 1951.[1] He graduated from the Kharkiv Engineering-Construction Institute in 1973, and for several years thereafter worked at a local factory of concrete and steel manufacturing.[1]

Political career

Kushnaryov became a member of the Communist Party in 1981. In 1989, during the Glasnost era, he joined the pro-democracy movement in the Ukrainian SSR. In 1990 Kushnaryov was elected to both the Kharkiv city council and the Verkhovna Rada, where he took part in formulating the fledgling country's constitution, and in 1994 he became mayor of the city of Kharkiv.[1]

Afterwards, Kushnaryov served as Leonid Kuchma's chief of staff from 1996 to 1998, and as governor of the Kharkiv Oblast from 2000 to 2004.

During the election crisis of 2004, Kushnaryov agitated for the creation of an independent southeastern Ukrainian state in the case of Viktor Yushchenko's victory. This caused him to be arrested on charges of separatism, that were eventually dropped. Following the Orange Revolution, Kushnaryov joined Viktor Yanukovych's Party of Regions and in 2006 he was elected to the Verkhovna Rada on the Party of Regions ticket.

Kushnaryov quickly became one of the leaders of the party along with Yanukovych and Rinat Akhmetov. Considered by many to be among the party's main ideologues, Kushnaryov could be frequently seen on television debating public policy.[2] In 2005 he published a book (Red Horse: Notes of a Counterrevolutionary) denouncing the Orange Revolution.[3]

Death and remembrance

On January 15, 2007, Kushnaryov was accidentally shot in the liver while hunting with a group of friends and colleagues, and died two days later in a hospital in Izium. A two-day period of mourning was declared in Kharkiv over the death of the former governor.[4][5] Yevhen Kushnaryov was survived by his wife, two children, and two grandchildren.[1]

In October 2008 a monument to honour Kushnaryov was unveiled in Kharkiv.[6] The Yevgeny Kushnaryov Foundation for Democracy Initiatives Support was founded in October 2007. The goal of the organisation is "to pursue with the ideas that mattered to him".[7]

Honors and Distinctions

Trivia

  • Although his Ukrainian name was Yevhen (Євген), Kushnaryov personally preferred to use the Russified form Yevheniy (Євгеній) when writing in Ukrainian.[8]

See also

References

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