Jump to content

Yaroslav Markevych

From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

Yaroslav Markevych
Ярослав Маркевич
In office
27 November 2014 – 29 August 2019
Personal details
Born (1973-12-03) 3 December 1973 (age 50)
Kamin-Rybolov, Khankaysky district, Primorsky krai, Russia
NationalityUkrainian
Political partySamopomich Union
Awards

Yaroslav Volodymyrovych Markevych (Ukrainian: Ярослав Володимирович Маркевич, born 3 December 1973) is a Ukrainian politician, businessman, activist, former soldier in the Donbas Battalion, former Member of Parliament of Ukraine of the 8th convocation from Samopmich Union, and Member of the Parliamentary Budget Committee.[1] Markevych did not return to parliament following the 2019 Ukrainian parliamentary election.[2]

Biography

[edit]

Yaroslav Markevych was born in Kamin-Rybolov, a village in Khankaysky District in Primorsky Krai, Russia. He studied at the Institute of the Social Development, on the faculty of Legal Support of the Financial Activities of the Enterprise. In 1992 he started working as a lawyer in a private trade house. From 1993 to 1995 he worked as a Deputy Director of the private scientific-producing firm PRINT. In 1996 he was a press-secretary at AT STANK. BeforeUntil his election to Ukrainian parliament he worked as manager and deputy head at a number of private companies.[3]

In 2005 he started working with Viktor Yushchenko's party Nasha Ukraina, taking the post of the Head of the Executive Committee of the Kharkiv city party organisation, from 2008 – the Oblast party organisation. Since 2000 he was the president of the civic organisation East Ukrainian Fund of Democracy Development.[4]

In 2004 he was the consultant on pre-elections issues to OSCE.

Markevych is married and has two children.

Awards

[edit]

References

[edit]
  1. ^ "Пошук за реквізитами - Законотворчість".
  2. ^ CEC counts 100 percent of vote in Ukraine's parliamentary elections, Ukrinform (26 July 2019)
    (in Russian) Results of the extraordinary elections of the People's Deputies of Ukraine 2019, Ukrayinska Pravda (21 July 2019)
  3. ^ "Ярослав Маркевич". 10 September 2014.
  4. ^ "Archived copy" (PDF). Archived from the original (PDF) on 4 March 2016. Retrieved 2 November 2015.{{cite web}}: CS1 maint: archived copy as title (link)