Thursday, February 16, 2012


Ukraine

Factbox: Viktor Andriyovich Yushchenko

Viktor Yushchenko

TEXT SIZE - +
NAME: Viktor Andriyovich Yushchenko

BIRTHDATE: 23 February 1954 in the village of Khoruzhivka, in northeastern Ukraine.

BIOGRAPHY: After graduating from the Ternopil Financial Economic Institute in 1975, Yushchenko started his career as an accountant at a collective farm. A year later, he went to work for a regional branch of the U.S.S.R. State Bank, in his home region. He was later promoted to the bank's Kyiv branch, and over the next decade and a half held several senior banking posts.

In 1993, after Ukrainian independence, he became head of the newly formed National Bank of Ukraine. Yushchenko steered the introduction of the national currency, the hryvna, in 1997. In December 1999, Yushchenko was appointed prime minister by President Leonid Kuchma. His government fell after a parliamentary vote of no confidence in April 2001.

The following year, in 2002, Yushchenko became head of the opposition Our Ukraine coalition.

MARITAL STATUS: Married to Kateryna Yushchenko-Chumachenko, an American citizen and former U.S. State Department official. He has five children.

You Might Also Like

Video Love It (Or Hate It), It's Valentine's Day

Valentine's Day, the Western holiday celebrating love, has become a global phenomenon over the past two decades. The fall of communism and the emergence of the Internet have helped February 14 become something of an unofficial international day of romance. However, not all the passions the holiday stirs are related to love. While some countries have openly embraced the holiday, others are attempting to ban it or replace it with local customs. More

Video 'Police Detain Stuffed Animals' In Minsk Toy Protest

Belarusian youth activists say police have "detained" some stuffed animals used in an antigovernment protest in Minsk, in an echo of similar recent protests in Russia. More

Reports Of 'Pirates Of The Danube' Get The Old Heave-Ho

An attack last month on a Ukrainian barge on the Romanian sector of the Danube River has caused a diplomatic tussle between Bucharest and Kyiv, sparking media reports of possible acts of piracy on Europe's second-largest river. But do “Danube pirates” actually exist? More

Most Popular

               
 
 
 
 
Being Discussed Now

Euro Parliament Criticizes Russia Vote

Latest Comment (1 total)

rick: EU ....

they doesn't practise what they preaches More

Jolie In Sarajevo For Film Screening

Latest Comment (13 total)

rick: modesty of a person

is also measured

by problems that believes she can overcome .


I ... More

The Truth-Teller: Natasa Kandic, Urging Serbs To Face The Past

Latest Comment (34 total)

demon: Typical Belgrade drivel. Still no progress. Must try harder dunce. More