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Leonid Kuchma

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Leonid Kuchma
Леонід Данилович Кучма
2nd President of Ukraine
In office
19 July 1994 – 23 January 2005
Prime MinisterVitaliy Masol
Yevhen Marchuk
Pavlo Lazarenko
Valeriy Pustovoitenko
Viktor Yushchenko
Anatoliy Kinakh
Viktor Yanukovych
Preceded byLeonid Kravchuk
Succeeded byViktor Yushchenko
3rd Prime Minister of Ukraine
In office
13 October 1992 – 22 September 1993
PresidentLeonid Kravchuk
Preceded byVitold Fokin
Succeeded byVitaliy Masol
General Director of Yuzhmash
In office
1986–1992
Preceded byAleksandr Makarov
Succeeded byYuriy Alekseyev
Personal details
Born (1938-08-09) 9 August 1938 (age 86)
Novhorod-Siversky Raion, Chernihiv Oblast, Ukrainian SSR, Soviet Union
NationalityUkrainian
Political partyNone
Other political
affiliations
Party of Regions (2001)
SpouseLudmila Kuchma (Talalayeva)
ChildrenOlena Pinchuk
Alma materDnipropetrovsk National University
OccupationPolitician

Leonid Danylovych Kuchma (Template:Lang-uk) (born 9 August 1938) was the second President of independent Ukraine from 19 July 1994, to 23 January 2005. Kuchma took office after winning the 1994 presidential election against his rival, incumbent Leonid Kravchuk. Kuchma won re-election for an additional 5-year term in 1999.

His presidency was surrounded by numerous corruption scandals and the lessening of media freedoms. Corruption accelerated after Kuchma's election in 1994, but in 2000–2001, his power began to weaken in the face of exposures in the media.[1]

Under his watch the Ukrainian economy continued to decline until 1999, whereas growth was recorded since 2000, bringing relative prosperity to some segments of urban residents. During his presidency, Ukrainian-Russian ties began to improve.[2]

Early life

Kuchma was born in a village of Chaikine Chernihiv Oblast. His father Danylo Prokopovych (1901–1942) had died at the field hospital 756 near a village of Novoselytsia during World War II and his mother Paraska Trokhymivna worked at a farm. Kuchma attended the Kostoborove general education school in the neighboring Semenivka Raion. He enrolled to Dnipropetrovsk National University and graduated it in 1960 with a degree in rocket science as an engineer-mechanic. Kuchma is a candidate of technical sciences. The same year he joined the Communist Party of Soviet Union.

Career

After graduation Kuchma worked in a field of aerospace engineering for the Yuzhnoye Design Bureau. At 28 he became a deployed testing director for the Bureau at the Baikonur cosmodrome. There are many suggestions that Kuchma's earlier career was significantly boosted by his marriage to Lyudmila Talalayeva, an adopted daughter of Gennadiy Tumanov, the Yuzhmash chief engineering officer and later the Soviet Minister of Medium Machine Building.[3][4] At 38 Kuchma became the Communist party chairman at Yuzhmash and a member of the Central Committee of Communist Party (Bolshevik) of Ukraine. He was a delegate of the 27th and 28th Congresses of the Communist Party of Soviet Union.

In 1982 Kuchma was appointed the first deputy of general design engineer and from 1986 to 1992 he held position of a general director at the manufacturing complex "Yuzhny Machine-building Plant". From 1990 to 1992 Kuchma was a member of the Ukrainian parliament (1st (12) convocation, Committee on Defence and State Security), and became Prime Minister of Ukraine in 1992.

President (1994–2005)

Kuchma resigned from the position of Prime Minister of Ukraine in September 1993 to successfully run for the presidency in 1994 on a platform to boost the economy by restoring economic relations with Russia and faster pro-market reforms. He was re-elected in 1999 to his second term. During Kuchma's Presidency opposition papers were closed and several journalists died in mysterious circumstances.[5]

Domestic policy

In October 1994, Kuchma announced comprehensive economic reforms, including reduced subsidies, lifting of price controls, lower taxes, privatization of industry and agriculture, and reforms in currency regulation and banking. The parliament approved the plan's main points. The International Monetary Fund promised a $360 million loan to initiate reforms.

He was re-elected in 1999 to his second term. Opponents accused him of involvement in the killing in 2000 of journalist Georgiy Gongadze (see also SBU, "Cassette Scandal", Mykola Mel'nychenko), which he has always denied. Critics also blamed Kuchma for restrictions on press freedom. Kuchma is believed to have played a key role in sacking the Cabinet of Viktor Yushchenko by Verkhovna Rada on 26 April 2001.

Kuchma's Prime Minister from 2002 until early January 2005 was Viktor Yanukovych, after Kuchma dismissed Anatoliy Kinakh, his previous appointee.

Foreign policy

Leonid Kuchma with Russian President Vladimir Putin.

Kuchma signed a "Treaty of Friendship, Cooperation, and Partnership" with Russia, and endorsed a round of talks with the CIS. Additionally, he referred to Russian as "an official language". He signed a special partnership agreement with NATO and even raised the possibility of membership of the alliance.

After Kuchma's popularity at home and abroad sank as he became mired in corruption scandals, he turned to Russia as his new ally, saying Ukraine needed a "multivector" foreign policy that balanced eastern and western interests[citation needed].

Kuchma and the Cassette Scandal

From 1998 to 2000, Kuchma's bodyguard and former KGB employee, Mykola Mel'nychenko, bugged Kuchma's office and turned over the recordings to an opposition member of the Ukraine Parliament. The release of the tapes – dubbed "Kuchmagate" by the Ukrainian press – supposedly revealed Kuchma approving the sale of radar systems to Saddam Hussein and ordering the director of Ukraine's intelligence agency to "take care" of journalist Georgiy Gongadze, who had been following the government’s connections to illegal arms sales, among other allegations.

In September 2000 Gongadze disappeared and his headless corpse was found mutilated on 3 November 2000. On 28 November, opposition politician Oleksandr Moroz publicised the tape recordings implicating Kuchma in Gongadze's murder. In 2005 the Ukrainian Prosecutor General’s office instigated criminal proceedings against Kuchma and members of his former administration in connection with the murder of Gongadze.[6] It is rumored, however, that Kuchma had been unofficially granted immunity from prosecution in return for his graceful departure from office in 2005.[7][8]

Critics of the tape point to the difficulty of Mel'nychenko recording 500 hours of dictaphone tape unaided and undetected, the lack of material evidence of said recording equipment and other doubts which question the authenticity and motive of the release of the tape. Kuchma did acknowledge in 2003 that his voice was indeed one of those on the tapes, but claimed that they had been selectively edited to distort his meaning.[9]

The General Prosecutor of Ukraine's Office canceled its resolution to deny opening of criminal cases against Kuchma and other politicians within the Gongadze-case on 9 October 2010.[10] On 22 March 2011, Ukraine opened an official investigation into the murder of Gongadze and two days later Ukrainian prosecutors charged Kuchma with involvement in the murder.[11][12] A Ukrainian district court ordered prosecutors to drop criminal charges against Kuchma on 14 December 2011 on grounds that evidence linking him to the murder of Gongadze was insufficient.[13] The court rejected Mel'nychenko's recordings as evidence.[14] Gongadze's widow Myroslava Gongadze lodged an appeal against the ruling one week later.[15]

Kuchma, Putin and transnational crime

One of the taped conversations is about the Saint Petersburg Immobilien und Beteiligungs AG, a company suspected of facilitating Saint Petersburg mobsters, Colombian drug lords, and transcontinental money laundering. Vladimir Putin was one of the company's advisers from 1992 until he became President of Russia in 2000. On the tapes, Kuchma discusses Putin's Europe-wide operation to get into possession of all documents that could be used as evidence.[16]

Role in the election's crisis of 2004

Kuchma's role in the election's crisis of 2004 is not entirely clear. After the second round on 22 November 2004, it appeared that Yanukovych had won the election by fraud, which caused the opposition and independent observers to dispute the results, leading to the Orange Revolution.

Kuchma was urged by Yanukovych and Viktor Medvedchuk (the head of the presidential office) to declare a state of emergency and hold the inauguration of Yanukovych. He denied the request by admittedly stating in a phone conversation with Russian President Vladimir Putin that he refused to pass the government into the hands of an alleged Donetsk criminal. [citation needed] Later, Yanukovych publicly accused Kuchma of a betrayal.

Nevertheless, Kuchma refused to officially dismiss Prime Minister Yanukovych after the parliament passed a motion of no confidence against the Cabinet on 1 December 2004.

Soon after, Kuchma left the country. He returned to Ukraine in March 2005.

Kuchma stated in October 2009 he would vote for Victor Yanukovych at the Ukrainian presidential election, 2010.[17] Although Kuchma in conversation with United States Ambassador to Ukraine John F. Tefft, in a document dated 2 February 2010 uncovered during the United States diplomatic cables leak, called the voters choice between Yanukovych and Yulia Tymoshenko during the second round of the 2010 presidential election as a choice between “bad and very bad" and praised (the candidate eliminated in the first round of the election) Arseniy Yatsenyuk instead.[18]

As of September 2011 Kuchma believes that Yanukovych was the real winner of the 2004 election.[19]

Politicians closely associated with Kuchma

Aides and advisors that became public figures after or before

Influential statesmen

Business oligarchs and managers of important state-owned companies

Family and personal life

Leonid Kuchma is married, his spouse, Lyudmila Kuchma, is the Honourary President of the National Fund of Social Protection of Mothers and Children "Ukraine to Children".[21] Kuchma's only daughter Elena Pinchuk founded the ANTIAIDS Foundation in 2003.[22] She is married to politician Viktor Pinchuk, a famous industrialist and philanthropist whose Victor Pinchuk Foundation regularly hosts a philanthropic forum at the annual World Economic Forum in Davos. Olena Pinchuk has a son Roman (born in 1991, from her previous marriage with Ukrainian businessman Igor Franchuk) who attends Brown University, and two daughters Viktor Pinchuk, Katerina (born in 2003) and Veronica (2011).

According to the Ukrainian magazine Focus Olena Pinchuk placed among the top 10 most influential women in Ukraine for 2010.[23]

Kuchma was an amateur guitar player in his younger years. He was also known for his skill at the complicated card game preferans. He was allowed to keep the state-owned dacha in Koncha-Zaspa for his personal use upon completion of his state duties.[24] The government order #15-r that would allowed for Kuchma to keep his estate was signed by the acting prime-minister Mykola Azarov on 19 January 2005. Kuchma was also allowed to keep his full presidential salary and all the service personnel along with two state-owned vehicles. That order also stated that for everything it would paid out of the state budget.

Related government issues

The next month a minister of Justice Roman Zvarych said that he has intentions to review that order. On 28 February 2005 the government of Tymoshenko canceled the order, but the new government of Yanukovych reinstated it once again on 18 April 2007.

Awards

Template:Russian Kuchma was awarded the Azerbaijani Istiglal Order for his contributions to development of Azerbaijan-Ukraine relations and strategic cooperation between the states by President of Azerbaijan Heydar Aliyev on 6 August 1999.[25]

Ukrainian Honours
  • Order of the Ukrainian Orthodox Church (Moscow Patriarchate) of St. Ilya of Murom, 1st class (2004)
  • Honorary Citizen of the Donetsk Oblast (2002)
Foreign Honours

Further reading

  • Åslund, Anders, and Michael McFaul.Revolution in Orange: The Origins of Ukraine's Democratic Breakthrough (2006)
  • Aslund, Anders. How Ukraine Became a Market Economy and Democracy (2009)
  • Birch, Sarah. Elections and Democratization in Ukraine (2000) online edition
  • Kubicek, Paul. The History of Ukraine (2008) excerpt and text search
  • Kuzio, Taras. Ukraine: State and Nation Building (1998) online edition
  • Sochor, Zenovia A. "Political Culture and Foreign Policy: Elections in Ukraine 1994." in: Tismăneanu, Vladmir (ed.). 1995. Political Culture and Civil Society in Russia and the New States of Eurasia. (1994) ISBN 1-56324-364-4. pp. 208–224.
  • Whitmore, Sarah. ''State Building in Ukraine: The Ukrainian Parliament, 1990–2003 Routledge, 2004 online edition
  • Wilson, Andrew. Ukraine's Orange Revolution (2005)
  • Wilson, Andrew. The Ukrainians: Unexpected Nation, 2nd ed. 2002; online excerpts at Amazon
  • Wolczuk, Roman. Ukraine's Foreign and Security Policy 1991–2000 (2002) excerpt and text search
  • Zon, Hans van. The Political Economy of Independent Ukraine. 2000 online edition

References

  1. ^ Adrian Karatnycky, "Ukraine's Orange Revolution," Foreign Affairs, Vol. 84, No. 2 (Mar. – Apr., 2005), pp. 35–52 in JSTOR
  2. ^ Robert S. Kravchuk, "Kuchma as Economic Reformer," Problems of Post-Communism Vol. 52#5 September–October 2005, pp 48–58
  3. ^ Бондаренко К. Леонід Кучма: портрет на фоні епохи. «Фоліо». Харків, 2007; стр. 21
  4. ^ Деньги к деньгам: браки в украинской политике (UNIAN, 12 July 2007). Unian.net. Retrieved on 6 August 2011.
  5. ^ Country profile: Ukraine, BBC News
  6. ^ Mosnews.com
  7. ^ Crouch, David (6 April 2005). "Secrets of journalist's murder cast long shadow over Ukraine's orange revolution". The Guardian. Retrieved on 6 August 2011.
  8. ^ "Ukraine ex-leader charged over murder". Al Jazeera. 24 March 2011. Retrieved 24 March 2011.
  9. ^ Eastern Europe, Russia and Central Asia 2004 (Europa Publications), Routledge, December 12, 2003, ISBN 1857431871 (page 504)
  10. ^ Prosecutor general's office can open criminal cases against former President Leonid Kuchma and other politicians, Kyiv Post (October, 2010)
  11. ^ "Ukraine's ex-president: Catching Kuchma". The Economist. 399 (8727): 25. 2 – 8 April 2011. {{cite journal}}: Check date values in: |date= (help)
  12. ^ "Ukraine's ex-leader Kuchma probed over Gongadze murder". BBC News (22 March 2011). Retrieved on 6 August 2011.
  13. ^ Court clears Kuchma of Gongadze murder charges, Kyiv Post (14 December 2011)
  14. ^ Court rejects Melnychenko's tapes as evidence in Gongadze case, Kyiv Post (14 December 2011)
  15. ^ Gongadze's widow appeals closure of criminal case against Kuchma, Kyiv Post (21 December 2011)
  16. ^ J.V. Koshiw (12–13 October 2007). "Kuchma's "Parallel Cabinet" – The center of President Kuchma's authoritarian rule based on the Melnychenko recordings" (PDF).
  17. ^ Kuchma says he'll vote for Yanukovych as Ukraine's president, Kyiv Post (16 October 2009)
  18. ^ Kuchma: Yanukovych-Tymoshenko contest a choice between 'bad and very bad', Kyiv Post (3 December 2010)
  19. ^ Kuchma: Orange Revolution defines Ukrainians as Europeans, Kyiv Post (17 September 2011)
  20. ^ In the cabinet of Yanukovych
  21. ^ http://www.ukraine-children.org.ua/eng/about/101
  22. ^ Elena Franchuk ANTIAIDS Foundation : The daughter of Kuchma will be fighting against AIDS and her husband Pinchuk will provide his media support. Antiaids.org (28 November 2003). Retrieved on 6 August 2011.
  23. ^ 100 самых влиятельных женщин Украины. Рейтинг Фокуса. Focus.ua. Retrieved on 6 August 2011.
  24. ^ Ukrayinska Pravda exposes president’s Mezhygirya deal, Kyiv Post (6 May 2009)
  25. ^ "Ukraynanın Prezidenti Leonid Daniloviç Kuçmanın "İstiqlal" ordeni ilə təltif edilməsi haqqında AZƏRBAYCAN RESPUBLİKASI PREZİDENTİNİN FƏRMANI". Retrieved 20 January 2011. {{cite web}}: Unknown parameter |trans_title= ignored (|trans-title= suggested) (help)
Political offices
Preceded by Prime Minister of Ukraine
1992–1993
Succeeded by
Preceded by President of Ukraine
1994–2005
Succeeded by
Party political offices
Preceded by
Office created
Leader of the Party of Regions
2001
Succeeded by

Template:Persondata