Anatoly Mohilev

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Anatoly Mohiljow (2014)
Cyrillic ( Ukrainian )
Анатолій Володимирович Могильов
Transcr. : Anatoly Volodymyrowytsch Mohiljow
Cyrillic ( Russian )
Анатолий Владимирович Могилёв
Transcr. : Anatoly Vladimirovich Mogilev

Anatolij Volodymyrowytsch Mohiljow (born April 6, 1955 in Petropavlovsk-Kamchatsky ) is a Ukrainian politician. From March 2010 to November 2011 he was Interior Minister in the cabinet of Mykola Azarov and from November 2011 to February 2014 Prime Minister of the Autonomous Republic of Crimea .

Life

Mohiljow first completed a degree in physics and worked as a physics teacher. In 1982 he moved to the Ministry of the Interior and worked for the criminal police. He graduated from the University of the Ukrainian Ministry of the Interior in 1993 and was first in Artemivsk , then later in Makiyivka, head of the department of the Ministry of Interior and thus the city's chief of police.

In 2007 he became the chief of police of the Autonomous Republic of Crimea with the rank of major general. During his activity in the Crimea, Mohilev came into repeated conflicts with the Crimean Tatars and with his superior, the then Ukrainian Interior Minister Yuriy Lutsenko . Lutsenko finally suspended Mohilev from his office because he had become an official member of Viktor Yanukovych's election campaign staff and this position was not compatible with his office under the laws of Ukraine.

After Yanukovych won the 2010 presidential elections in Ukraine , Mohilev became Minister of the Interior of Ukraine. His appointment was heavily criticized by the Crimean Tatars. A motion to vote against him in the Verkhovna Rada did not achieve the required majority of votes in June 2010.

Mohilev was repeatedly accused by his political opponents of not knowing the Ukrainian language . In August 2010, President Yanukovych publicly admonished him and advised him to learn Ukrainian. Mohiljow promised to do so and soon after reported that he had largely mastered the language. In November 2011, Mohilev was dismissed by Yanukovych as Minister of the Interior and at the same time appointed Prime Minister of Crimea.

After pro-Russian militias occupied government and parliament buildings at the beginning of the Crimean crisis in 2014, the peninsula's parliament declared the regional government dismissed on February 27. The MPs elected the chairman of the Russian Unity Party , Sergei Aksjonow, to succeed Mohilev . While the former Ukrainian President Yanukovych recognized his election, the interim president Oleksandr Turchynov declared it to be illegal.

Web links

Individual evidence

  1. http://www.pravda.com.ua/news/2010/03/12/4857067/
  2. http://www.rferl.org/content/Crimean_Tatars_Seek_Criminal_Case_Against_Ukrainian_Interior_Minister/1985581.html
  3. http://www.kyivpost.com/news/politics/detail/69840/
  4. http://de.rian.ru/politics/20100820/257141416.html
  5. http://www.unian.net/eng/news/news-466976.html
  6. Referendum: Ukraine is threatened with secession of Crimea . Spiegel Online, February 27, 2014, accessed March 2, 2014
  7. ^ Christian Esch: Parliament in the Crimea hostage . Frankfurter Rundschau, February 27, 2014, accessed on March 2, 2014
  8. Turchynov Acknowledges Aksenov's Appointment As Crimean Prime Minister Unlawful ( Memento of March 1, 2014 in the Internet Archive ). Ukrainian News, March 1, 2014 accessed on March 2, 2014