Andriy Klyuyev

This name uses Eastern Slavic naming customs; the patronymic is Petrovych and the family name is Klyuyev.
Andriy Klyuyev
Андрій Клюєв

Andriy Klyuyev
2nd Head of the Presidential Administration of Ukraine
In office
January 24, 2014[1]  February 23, 2014[2][3]
President Viktor Yanukovych
Preceded by Serhiy Levochkin
9th Secretary of RNBO of Ukraine
In office
February 14, 2012  January 24, 2014[1]
President Viktor Yanukovych
Preceded by Raisa Bohatyryova
Succeeded by Andriy Parubiy
17th First Vice Prime Minister
In office
March 11, 2010  February 14, 2012
Prime Minister Mykola Azarov
Preceded by Oleksandr Turchynov
Succeeded by Valeriy Khoroshkovskyi
1st Minister of Economic Development and Trade
In office
December 9, 2010  February 14, 2012
Prime Minister Mykola Azarov
Preceded by Vasyl Tsushko (as Minister of Economy)
Succeeded by Petro Poroshenko
Vice Prime Minister (Fuel-Energy Complex)
In office
December 10, 2003  December 29, 2004
Prime Minister Viktor Yanukovych
In office
August 4, 2006  December 18, 2007
Prime Minister Viktor Yanukovych
Personal details
Born Andriy Petrovych Klyuyev
(1964-08-12) August 12, 1964
Donetsk, Ukrainian SSR, Soviet Union
Political party Party of Regions
Alma mater Donetsk National Technical University
Signature

Andriy Petrovych Klyuyev (Ukrainian: Андрій Петрович Клюєв), also spelled as Kluev/Klyuev, is a Ukrainian businessman and politician, ranked as 7th "Most influential person in Ukraine" in 2011 by the Korrespondent.[4] He is a former (although for a short time) head of the Presidential Administration of Ukraine.[1][2] Following being for two years the Secretary of the National Security and Defense Council of Ukraine.[5][6] His brother Serhiy Klyuyev is also politician and businessman.[7] In 2006 experts estimated the joint assets of the Klyuyev brothers to be US$144 million.[7] In June 2009, Klyuyev brothers were ranked 48th in the Korrespondent 's list of Top 50 richest Ukrainians with the estimated wealth of US$227 million.[8] He was last seen with Viktor Yanukovych in Balaklava, Ukraine.[9]

Early life

Andriy Klyuyev graduated from the Mining College of the Donetsk Politech Institute as a mining automation and mechanization engineer. He also earned his Candidate of Technical Sciences post-graduate degree in 1989.

Klyuyev started working in 1983 as the underground miner of the Zasyadko coal mine, then becoming a foreman at the "Gorki" Mine (since 1984). After the graduation he worked as the deputy chief and the chief of mine transport at the "Bilorichenska" Mine ("Voroshylovhradvuhillya" state holding in Luhansk Oblast). From 1986 to 1991 Klyuyev was conducting full-time postgraduate research at his alma mater.

Business career

From 1991 to 1994, Andriy Klyuyev headed several coal mining-related machine building companies, including "Ukrpidshipnyk" SC[7] which is widely mentioned as his own company.

Klyuyev and his brother Serhiy Klyuyev sold Active Bank in March 2013, as all stakes in solar business were sold in 2008 already.[10]

Klyuyev has been repeatedly accused by journalists of being "a shadowy oligarch"[11] with business links to (former President) Viktor Yanukovych's family, allegedly using his power to secure multi-billion contracts.[12][13][14]

Political career

Donbas politics

Since 1994 Klyuyev was a deputy chairman of the Donetsk Oblast Executive Council. From November 1995 to April 1996 he was a Deputy Head of the Donetsk Oblast State Administration, responsible for local development, trade, and consumer goods production.

National-level politics

After a career in Donetsk Oblast, at the time working closely with later and current President Viktor Yanukovych, Klyuyev moved to national politics. On December 14, 2001 Klyuyev was elected the deputy chairman of the Party of Regions. At the 2002 election, he became a member of the Verkhovna Rada for the Party of Regions, working as head of the Energy, Nuclear Policy and Nuclear Safety Committee. On April 19, 2003 at the 5th Party Congress Klyuyev was elected the secretary of the party's political council.

Yanukovych election campaign 2010

From 2003 to 2004 Klyuyev was the Energy Vice Prime Minister in the First Yanukovych Government.[7]

Klyuyev is described in the press as the Yanukovych’s shadow campaign head in 2010 presidential election, following Borys Kolesnikov as head of the electoral headquarter of the Party of Regions. He got named Deputy Vice Prime Minister only, since more influential competitors insight the Party of Regions managed to occupy the posts of the Head of the Presidential administration and the Prime Minister.

Opposition and Azarov Government

At the 2006 and 2007 parliamentary elections, Klyuyev was re-elected as a deputy for Party of Regions.

On March 11, 2010 Klyuyev was appointed the First Vice-Prime Minister in the Azarov Government, and after the Yanukovych administrative reform on December 9, 2010 he also has accepted the assignment of the Minister of Economic Development and Trade.[7]

National Security and Defense Council

On February 14, 2012, Klyuyev was appointed Secretary of the National Security and Defense Council of Ukraine.[5][6] Insiders in the Party of Regions always claimed that his removal from the post of the First Vice Prime Minister, responsible for the European Integration of Ukraine, happened due to the personal conflict with the Head of the Presidential Administration, Sergiy Lyovochkin and was to be seen as a punishment for his influential position within the institutions of the European Union.

NSDC secretary sees Azarov as likely candidate for premiership.[15]

Presidential Administration of Ukraine

On 24 January 2014 President Yanukovych signed a decrees that dismissed Klyuyev as National Security and Defense Council secretary and appointed him head of the Presidential Administration of Ukraine.[1] On 23 February 2014, just after the "Maidan revolution",[16] Klyuyev resigned from this post.[2] His spokesman, Artem Petrenko, claimed 2 days later that Klyuyev's had been wounded when his car had been attacked while he was travelling back to Kiev from Crimea after tendering his resignation to former President Yanukovych.[2][17] Since 7 March 2014 he is wanted for involvement in mass murder.[18] The day before the EU froze his asset.[19]

References

Wikimedia Commons has media related to Andriy Klyuyev.
  1. 1 2 3 4 Kliuyev appointed presidential chief of staff, Interfax-Ukraine (24 January 2014)
  2. 1 2 3 4 Kliuyev resigns, wounded, no threat to his life - spokesman, Interfax-Ukraine (25 February 2014)
  3. "Клюєв подав у відставку". unian.ua.
  4. Design Maxim Tkachuk, web-architecture by Volkova Dasha, Yuriy Sokolov, templated by Alexey Kovtanets, programming by Irina Batvina, Maxim Bielushkin, Sergey Bogatyrchuk, Borshchanenko Maksym, Vitaliy Galkin, Victor Lushkin, Dmitry Medun, Igor Sitnikov, Vladimir Tarasov, Alexander Filippov, Sergei Koshelev, Yaroslav Ostapiuk, Viktor Voitenko. "Андрей Клюев – Досье на Корреспондент, Фото и Видео, Последние Новости, Биография". Корреспондент.
  5. 1 2 "President presents newly appointed NSDC Secretary" (Press release). Administration of President. 2012-02-14. Retrieved 2012-02-15.
  6. 1 2 "Ukrainian president replaces National Security and Defense Council secretary". Interfax. 2012-02-14. Retrieved 2012-02-15.
  7. 1 2 3 4 5 (Russian) Клюев Андрей Петрович, Информационно-аналитический центр "ЛІГА"
  8. Korrespondent's 2009 top 50 richest Ukrainians list released
  9. "Ukraine interim leaders warn of 'unpopular steps' ahead". BBC News.
  10. (Ukrainian) Брати Клюєви вийшли з банківського бізнесу Brothers Klyuyev out of the banking business, Ukrayinska Pravda (11 March 2013)
  11. Ukraine: Milking both cows
  12. Офшорний дах для Януковича та Клюєва (Ukrainian), Serhyi Leshchenko: Tax Haven of Yanukovych and Kluyev (republished in English)
  13. "Корреспондент: Деньги из солнца. Украинская станция переработки солнечной энергии стала поводом для международного скандала". korrespondent.net.
  14. Expect Fraud (Kyiv Post editorial)
  15. (Ukrainian) Список депутатів нової Верховної Ради, Ukrayinska Pravda (11 November 2012)
  16. Ukraine: Speaker Oleksandr Turchynov named interim president, BBC News (23 February 2014)
    Ukraine protests timeline, BBC News (23 February 2014)
  17. Ukraine crisis: Turchynov warns of 'separatism' risk, BBC News (25 February 2014)
  18. "Yanukovych heads list of those wanted for crimes". KyivPost.
  19. "EU imposes assets freeze on Yanukovich and ‘family’". Financial Times.


Political offices
Preceded by
Serhiy Lyovochkin
Head of the Presidential Administration
2014
Succeeded by
Oleh Rafalsky


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