Prime Minister Arseniy Yatsenyuk. Where is Yatsenyuk: rumors and gossip about the life of the ex-premier after the resignation

Place of Birth: city ​​of Chernivtsi, USSR.

Nationality: Jew.

Yatsenyuk himself claims that he is a third-generation Ukrainian.

The DailyUa writes:
“Why does the Jew Yatsenyuk just desperately insist that he is a third-generation Ukrainian, if the parental tribe closest to him is clearly of Jewish nationality. Moreover, Yatsenyuk's mother, whose maiden name is Bakai, belongs to an ancient Jewish family, which is known to the world thanks to the most authoritative interpreter of the Talmud - Rabbi Bakai

As you know, the nationality of the Jews is determined by the mother.

Yatsenyuk's wife Teresa (nee Gur, in Hebrew - Ger) is also of Jewish origin. Her ancestors belonged to the dynasty of Hasidic tzaddiks from the city of Gura Kalwaria (located 30 km southeast of Warsaw; also known as New Yeruzalem), in which about half of the population by the end of the 19th century. were Jews.

As you know, purebred Jews marry "their own."

Nickname: Pee, Rabbit, Senya. "Rabbit" was invented by the newspaper "Komsomolskaya Pravda in Ukraine". P olitic "kinder surprise"

journalist Leonid Titov for the Vsluh portal brought a lot of interesting things about Yatsenyuk's school and student years.
“Pisyay had a hobby. He ... kept a dossier on all classmates, for which he started a journal, where he pasted photos of students, cutting a vignette for the third grade. Moreover, the class was sorted into two categories: Pisyai's subordinates and his enemies.

Education:

1996— Chernivtsi State University, lawyer.

2001– Chernivtsi Institute of Trade and Economics of the Kyiv Trade and Economic University, “accounting and auditing”.

Academic degree: Candidate of Economic Sciences.

Occupation: Ukrainian political and statesman

Hobbies: Yatsenyuk loves to drive a car, likes to work out in the gym. He is fond of firearms and even has several pistols and shotguns in his collection.

It is also known that as a child, Yatsenyuk was fond of collecting stamps and match labels. Currently, numismatics has also been added to these hobbies.

Blogs, personal pages:

CHARITY

Arseniy Yatsenyuk heads the Open Ukraine Charitable Foundation. The foundation was founded in 2007.
The Chairman of the Supervisory Board of the Fund is the wife of Arseniy Yatsenyuk - Teresia.
According to Arseniy Yatsenyuk's declaration for 2011, he spent 596,000 hryvnias on charity.

CAREER

ECONOMIC ACTIVITIES

Right after 11th grade Yatsenyuk and his friends were selling cars at the car market.

December 1992 - as a second-year student, he founded the law firm Yurek Ltd, which dealt with privatization issues. According to media reports, he ran the business together with the son of the then governor of the Chernivtsi region, Ivan Gnatyshyn.

September 1997 - Yatsenyuk became temporarily unemployed. In parallel with this, he moved to the capital of Ukraine - Kyiv. Already in January 1998, he was hired as a consultant in the credit department of the Joint-Stock Postal-Pension Bank "Aval". In less than a year, Arseniy Petrovich moved from an ordinary consultant to an adviser to the chairman of the board of this bank. Yatsenyuk spent the last month of work in this financial institution in the status of deputy chairman.

POLITICAL ACTIVITY

The next career stage was the position of the Minister of Economy of the ARC. According to rumors, Valery Gorbatov, then Chairman of the Council of Ministers of Crimea, personally invited Yatsenyuk to the ministerial chair.

April 29, 2002- together with the entire Council of Ministers resigned. However, Yatsenyuk found a common language with the new chairman of the council, Sergei Kunitsyn, and retained his ministerial chair. Already on May 15, 2002, for the second time, he fully headed the Crimean Ministry of Economy.

January 2003- Chairman of the National Bank of Ukraine Serhiy Tigipko invited Yatsenyuk to the NBU for the position of first deputy.

2004— (since July) Yatsenyuk, thanks to the fact that Tigipko led the election headquarters of the presidential candidate of Ukraine Viktor Yanukovych, became the acting head of the National Bank. But Yanukovych lost the election and Tigipko was fired from the post of head of the NBU. Yatsenyuk resigned in February 2005.

Yatsenyuk moved to Odessa, where the local governor Tsushko appointed him his first deputy on March 9, 2005. Yatsenyuk did not stay in Odessa for long, already on September 27 of the same year he was appointed Minister of Economy in the government of Yuri Yekhanurov.

But soon, together with the entire government, he was dismissed by the newly elected Verkhovna Rada of Ukraine. True, despite the resignation, which officially took place on May 25, 2006, Yatsenyuk, like other members of the Cabinet of Ministers, arrived in office with the prefix “and. about." even before August.

On September 20, 2006, President of Ukraine Viktor Yushchenko appointed Arseniy Yatsenyuk First Deputy Head of the Secretariat of the President of Ukraine - Representative of the President of Ukraine in the Cabinet of Ministers of Ukraine.

Since September 25, 2006, Yatseniuk has been a member of the NBU Council, as well as a member of the Supervisory Boards of State Export-Import Bank of Ukraine OJSC and State Savings Bank of Ukraine OJSC. From the execution of the last two posts, he was released on March 13, 2007.

March 21, 2007 Arseniy Yatsenyuk was approved as Minister of Foreign Affairs of Ukraine and ceased his activities in the secretariat.

On the day of his appointment to the post of minister, Arseniy Yatsenyuk was included in the National Security and Defense Council of Ukraine.

On November 23, 2007, Arseniy Yatsenyuk took the oath of the deputy of the Verkhovna Rada of Ukraine, and on December 4, 2007, following the results of a secret ballot, he became the eighth chairman of the Ukrainian parliament. 227 deputies cast their votes for his candidacy.

On December 21, 2007, the President of Ukraine removed Arseniy Yatsenyuk from the National Security and Defense Council of Ukraine, since the head of parliament, unlike the head of the Foreign Ministry, should not be a member of this authority. However, on the same day, Arseniy Yatsenyuk was again introduced to the National Security and Defense Council.

On September 17, 2008, Arseniy Yatsenyuk resigned due to the termination of the ruling coalition.

On December 16, 2008, Yatsenyuk announced plans to create a political party on the basis of the Front for Changes public initiative.

In 2009, Yatsenyuk actively began the presidential campaign, and experts predicted him third place. However, closer to the election date, the activity of the ex-speaker decreased, and according to the voting results, he took fourth place.

Since December 2012 - People's Deputy of the 7th convocation from the Batkivshchyna (No. 2 in the list of the united opposition). In parliament, he headed the faction of the All-Ukrainian Association of Batkivshchyna. Member of the Verkhovna Rada Committee for Pensioners, Veterans and the Disabled.

On February 26, 2014, Yatseniuk was appointed Prime Minister of Ukraine. The next day, Yatsenyuk announced that he was resigning his deputy mandate and refusing to continue participating in the presidential race.

BELIEF, QUOTES

Arseniy Yatsenyuk for:
- increase in prices for the transit of Russian gas through the territory of Ukraine;
— long-term gas contract Ukraine with Russia;
— Creation of a GUAM peacekeeping contingent;
— participation of Ukraine in the economic projects of the CES;
— adoption by the United Nations of the ecological constitution of the Earth.

Arseniy Yatsenyuk vs.
— covert privatization of the Ukrainian GTS;
- to ensure that political forces in the parliamentary elections speculate on the topic of the Russian language and NATO;
— customs union within the CES;
— service of the Ukrainian military in Afghanistan.

PROMISES

CLOSE RELATIONSHIPS

COMPROMAT

Yatsenyuk belongs to the category of Ukrainian politicians who are difficult to convict of any illegal actions or - in violation of moral norms - Arseniy is very cautious. Most often, opponents remind Yatsenyuk of the order he signed in 2004 on issuing a stabilization loan in the amount of 10 million US dollars to Mriya Bank, which was led by Russophobe Petro Poroshenko. According to the court, the bank was supposed to be liquidated, but Yatsenyuk, who then held the position of the first deputy head of the National Bank, competently led the bank to pre-sale preparation. For which, as they say, he was generously thanked.

Orientation:

Areniy Yatsenyuk is suspected of homosexuality.
In 2009 to the editor THE MOSCOW POST UKRAINE by email camea letter from a representative of a Ukrainian human rights organization containing the following information:

“Dear editors, I am writing to you at the request of my friend, who for a long time was the sexual partner of the well-known Ukrainian politician Arseniy Yatsenyuk, who, when he was not such a public person, devoted time to us mortals ... Since I work in a human rights organization and I myself am one , who is commonly called gay, I simply cannot but express my protest against the homophobic policy pursued by Arseniy Yatsenyuk.

I happened to learn the story of his true relationship with my current partner, whom I met after his relationship with Arseniy. Since I do not have the right to disclose the real name of my companion, I will call him Sergey on the pages of this letter.

Before he started dating me, he spent a lot of time with Arseniy. He took him to his work, just as he takes many guys to him. It's no secret that even now some of us work at his headquarters (a hint at Vladimir Petrov - ed.)

Arseniy believes that the working atmosphere is the best cover for our relationship.

As far as I know, Arseniy began to like boys from school. He studied at secondary school No. 9 named after. Panas Mirny in the city of Chernivtsi. His father Petr Ivanovich was the deputy dean of the Faculty of History of the Chernivtsi University, and his mother Maria Grigorievna taught French there. Thus, Senya was guaranteed admission to the university. Sergei told me that most of all in his school years, Arseniy was afraid of getting into the army, because there people like us are simply slandered.

But, nevertheless, Arseny knew that thanks to his parents, the army did not threaten him, which means that he had carte blanche. I don’t know for sure when he began his first relationship with men, but I guess that from the school bench.

Sergey told me that Senya was a damn smart guy, and he never "fired" where he studied. He had a sort of split personality. At school, he played himself a born leader, and then with his friend he pretended to be a girl ... "

Sect
Yatsenyuk accepted Hubbard's doctrine of the endless transmigration of souls back in the "pre-Sagan" period - in 1998, when he worked as a consultant in the credit department of Aval Bank. In six months, the future speaker of parliament completed courses in Kyiv at the "School of Dianetics", under the name of which the "Church of Scientology" operated. By a strange coincidence, immediately after this, a sharp career rise of Arseny began. From his modest position, he quickly reached the chair of the deputy chairman of the board, and then began to grow at the speed of a bamboo in the civil service. Sect:

It is also curious that during his frequent trips to America, Yatsenyuk invariably meets in an informal setting with Mr. David Miscavige, who is part of the leadership of the "Church of Scientology".

And Arseniy Petrovich's sister, US citizen Alina Steele, actively participates in the work of the Church of Scientology branch in the city of Santa Barbara and received a high level of auditing there (determining her place in the Scientology hierarchical structure) - 4th (OT-4). My brother's is even higher - OT-6.

Despotism:

He forced all of his subordinates... to wear glasses! Even those who had everything in order with their eyesight were required to wear a "zero". Isn't it true that this very curious from a legal point of view initiative of a novice lawyer makes one think not only about professional adequacy, but rather about his mental sanity.

Privatization:

Vasily Moisov, head of the public organization "Spilnymi zusilly Chernivtsi" states that

“Yatsenyuk illegally privatized the land near the Kalininsky market, which was intended for the construction of auxiliary technical premises. He also privatized the land on the street. Rivne, which was intended for the construction of a large regional hospital. He also made active attempts to privatize the land on which the House of Officers is located.

According to the politician, Naftogaz of Ukraine remains "an opaque monster" and "a burden on the budget." As Yatsenyuk noted, the idea of ​​privatization would stop corruption in the energy sector. According to Interfax, later acting Prime Minister of Ukraine Arseniy Yatsenyuk announced the need to privatize the country's energy sector.

In addition, Verkhovna Rada-appointed Yatsenyuk announced a possible budget cut, which he believes is based on unrealistic figures.


Corruption:

Hackers of the Cyber ​​Militia opened the correspondence between Yatsenyuk and Yarema. From the text of the correspondence it follows that the money allocated by the United States for Ukraine was stolen. And now American representatives are going to Ukraine to check what the funds were spent on, in connection with this, Yatsenyuk demands from Yarema to quickly organize reports for American auditors.

The essence of the correspondence boils down to the fact that an “American auditor” is going to Ukraine, who wants to get acquainted with the documents on which the money allocated by the States was spent. From the published correspondence it follows that, probably, the money was simply stolen, since there are no documents. Yatsenyuk instructs Yarema to urgently "organize" the necessary paperwork, and at the same time so that "American friends" would believe, otherwise the financing of the program may be stopped. Yatsenyuk proposes to replenish the account by “transferring” money from the account where funds were accumulated to settle accounts between Ukraine and Gazprom for gas debts.

Thanks to Arseniy Petrovich in Ukraine, the special unit of the traffic police "Cobra" ceased to exist (albeit temporarily, with the coming to power of Yanukovych, everything became the same as before). The conflict took place from scratch: the car in which Yatsenyuk was driving did not give way to the Cobra car. The Kobrovites overtook the stream in the oncoming lane and showed Arseniy Petrovich the middle finger from the window. Since Arseniy Petrovich was already a respectable person at that time, he wrote down the numbers of the car and announced the precedent at a meeting of the Cabinet of Ministers. It turned out that the leadership of this same Cobra was driving in the Cobra car, namely the deputy. head of the special forces. As a result, Lieutenant Colonel Kozha (deputy head of the Cobra) and two of his subordinates who were in the service car were fired “for discrediting the service”, and the unit was disbanded by order of Yuriy Lutsenko, who at that time was the Minister of Internal Affairs of Ukraine.

A family

Father - Yatsenyuk Petr Ivanovich, was born on July 12, 1941 in the village of Kostirzhivka, Zastavnitsky district in Bukovina. In 1988 he defended his Ph.D. thesis, until 2002 he worked as deputy dean of the Faculty of History of Chernivtsi University.

Mother - Yatsenyuk (Bakay) Maria Grigoryevna, was born on November 21, 1943 in the village of Knyazhdvir, Kolomyia district, Stanislav (now Ivano-Frankivsk) region. In 1953, the Bakai family moved to Kolomyia. In 1967, she began teaching French at the university.

Sister - Alina Petrovna (she is Steel, she is also Jones), was born on September 30, 1967, currently lives in the USA.

Wife - Teresia Viktorovna, born in 1970 I met Arseniy Yatsenyuk in 1998 at the celebration of the New Year in Aval Bank. Now Teresia Viktorovna is on another maternity leave, her last position is a referent in "Aval". Two daughters.

Biography

Born on May 22, 1974 in the Bukovinian city of Chernivtsi. In 1991 he graduated from a specialized English-language school with a silver medal and entered the law faculty of the Chernivtsi National University. He continued his studies at the Chernivtsi Institute of Trade and Economics of the Kyiv National University of Trade and Economics.

In December 1992, 18-year-old Arseniy, together with the son of the then governor of the Chernivtsi region, Valentin Gnatyshin, participated in the creation of the Yurek Ltd law firm in Chernivtsi. Thus, he combined his studies at the university with business activities.

Since January 1998, Yatsenyuk moved to Kyiv, where he became a consultant in the credit department of the Raiffeisen Bank Aval Joint Stock Postal and Pension Bank.

In December 1998, he took the position of Advisor to the Chairman of the Board of Aval Bank. Arseniy Yatsenyuk spent his last month of work at Aval as Deputy Chairman of the Board of the Bank, after which he was invited by Chairman of the Council of Ministers of Crimea Valery Gorbatov to the post of Minister of Economy.

In 2001, Yatsenyuk graduated from the Chernivtsi Trade and Economic Institute - a branch of the Kyiv National Trade and Economic University - with a degree in accounting and auditing.

Political career

On September 19, 2001, the Verkhovna Rada of the Autonomous Republic of Crimea approved his appointment as Acting Minister of Economy of Crimea in the government of Valery Gorbatov. On November 21 of the same year, by decision of the Crimean parliament, Yatsenyuk was approved as Minister of Economy.

On April 29, 2002, together with the entire government, he resigned, as the newly elected Verkhovna Rada of Crimea began to work. Already on May 15, he headed the Ministry of Economy for the second time, but he stayed in this position for less than a year.

In January 2003, Serhiy Tigipko, chairman of the National Bank of Ukraine, appointed Yatsenyuk as his first deputy. In 2004, Yatsenyuk received a PhD in economics, defending his thesis on "Organization of the system of banking supervision and regulation in Ukraine."

On November 30, 2004, acting head of the NBU, Yatsenyuk issued a decree No. 576/2004 on a temporary ban on early withdrawal of bank deposits, which prevented the possible negative consequences of political confrontation. Yevgeny Chervonenko noted in 2009 that Yatsenyuk "during the revolution kept the currency and the National Bank."

In February 2005, Yatsenyuk resigned.

On March 9, 2005, the chairman of the Odessa Regional State Administration, Vasily Tsushko, appointed Arseniy Yatsenyuk as his first deputy.

September 27, 2005 Yatsenyuk was appointed Minister of Economy in the government of Yuri Yekhanurov. While in this position, Yatsenyuk led negotiations on Ukraine's accession to the World Trade Organization.

On September 20, 2006, Ukrainian President Yushchenko appointed Yatsenyuk First Deputy Head of the Secretariat of the President of Ukraine - Representative of the President of Ukraine in the Cabinet of Ministers of Ukraine.

Since September 25, 2006, Yatsenyuk has been a member of the board of the National Bank of Ukraine, as well as a member of the supervisory boards of State Export-Import Bank of Ukraine OJSC and State Savings Bank of Ukraine OJSC.

March 21, 2007 Yatsenyuk was approved as Minister of Foreign Affairs of Ukraine. After becoming Minister of Foreign Affairs, Yatsenyuk also became a member of the National Security and Defense Council of Ukraine.

On July 5, the Our Ukraine-People's Self-Defense (NU-NS) party bloc, which supported President Yushchenko, nominated Yatsenyuk as a candidate for the Verkhovna Rada of Ukraine. Having become a deputy, in early December he was elected to the post of head of the Verkhovna Rada. On December 18, the Verkhovna Rada of Ukraine dismissed Yatsenyuk from the post of head of the Foreign Ministry.

On November 23, 2007, Yatsenyuk took the oath of a deputy of the Verkhovna Rada of Ukraine, and on December 4, 2007, following the results of a secret ballot, he became the eighth chairman of the Ukrainian parliament. 227 deputies cast their votes for his candidacy.

On December 16, 2008, Yatsenyuk announced plans to create a political party based on the Front for Change public initiative. In an interview with The Day newspaper on February 4, 2009, he stated that he had no allies among politicians. Yatsenyuk was called a political clone of Ukrainian President Viktor Yushchenko.

In November 2009, Yatsenyuk was elected leader of the Front for Change party, and the party nominated him for the presidency. Yatsenyuk, in the 2010 elections, took only fourth place, receiving 6.96% of the vote.

On February 21, 2010, President Yanukovych proposed three candidates for the post of Prime Minister of Ukraine: Yatsenyuk, Serhiy Tigipko and Mykola Azarov. Yatsenyuk rejected the proposal after the Ukrainian parliament passed an amendment on March 9, 2010, which allowed individual deputies, and not just parliamentary factions, to take part in the formation of a majority coalition. Yatsenyuk did not approve of this amendment and called for early parliamentary elections.

In April 2012, the leader of the Front for Change, Arseniy Yatsenyuk, and the imprisoned leader of the Batkivshchyna, Yulia Tymoshenko, announced the formation of a common list to participate in the parliamentary elections. In June 2012, Yatsenyuk was elected chairman of the council of the United Opposition.

On July 14, 2012, Yatsenyuk and other members of the Front for Change ceased their membership in the party in order to take part in the parliamentary elections on the Batkivshchyna list as non-partisans.

According to the results of the October parliamentary elections, the "United Opposition" received 62 seats (25.54% of the vote) on the party list and 39 more in the majoritarian districts, receiving a total of 101 seats in parliament. On December 11, 2012, Yatsenyuk was elected chairman of the Batkivshchyna faction, the council of the United Opposition was headed by Oleksandr Turchynov instead.

On June 15, 2013, a unification congress was held in Kyiv, at which Yulia Tymoshenko was re-elected chairman of the Batkivshchyna VO, and Yatsenyuk was elected chairman of the political council of the party at her suggestion.

euromaidan

Since November 21, 2013, together with other opposition leaders Vitali Klitschko and Oleg Tyagnibok, he coordinated protest actions in the center of Kyiv, which began in response to the suspension by the Ukrainian government of the process of preparing for the signing of an association agreement between Ukraine and the European Union.

In order to get out of the protracted political crisis, on January 25, 2014, President of Ukraine Viktor Yanukovych offered Yatsenyuk the post of prime minister, but he refused.

On February 1, 2014, together with other opposition leaders, he took part in the Munich Conference, where he met with US Secretary of State John Kerry and European officials.

On February 26, 2014, the candidacies of the government being formed were presented on the Maidan, in which Yatsenyuk was offered the post of Prime Minister of Ukraine. The next day, the Verkhovna Rada of Ukraine adopted a resolution "On the appointment of A.P. Yatsenyuk as Prime Minister of Ukraine."

Under him, the government faced the Crimean crisis and armed conflict in the east of Ukraine, and under him the Association Agreement between Ukraine and the European Union was signed.

On July 24, 2014, Yatsenyuk announced his resignation due to the collapse of the parliamentary coalition and the blocking of government initiatives.

On September 10, 2014, Yatsenyuk and Speaker of the Verkhovna Rada Oleksandr Turchynov led the new Popular Front party. Yatsenyuk was elected chairman of its political council.

On October 26, early parliamentary elections were held in Ukraine. Following the results of the elections, Poroshenko said that he offered Yatsenyuk to head the government of Ukraine. Yatsenyuk's "People's Front" unexpectedly surpassed "Petro Poroshenko's Bloc" by about half a percent.

Income

Arseniy Yatsenyuk's fortune is estimated at several million dollars. According to his recent statements, he has about three million Ukrainian hryvnias in Ukrainian bank accounts.

However, the Prime Minister tactfully kept silent about how many dollars he had in foreign accounts. The real estate of Arseniy Yatsenyuk as of 2013 is also impressive: a country house, a plot, a garage, three apartments in Kyiv.

Rumors, scandals

Yatsenyuk is considered a figure who is seriously influenced by the main pro-government oligarch Kolomoisky (there is a persistent rumor in the Rada: the Dnipropetrovsk governor agreed with Poroshenko that the prime minister will remain the same under him; there are unverified rumors about a similar agreement with Tymoshenko).

However, the prime minister still has a fairly large freedom of action: there are enough areas not related to Kolomoisky's interests in which Yatsenyuk makes decisions without his influence.

During the 2009 presidential campaign, information was circulating that Arseniy Yatsenyuk's main sponsor was Viktor Pinchuk. Many Internet publications attribute to him the hiring of Russian political technologists, the organization of the work of the headquarters, and even personal intervention in personnel matters.

With regard to direct financial support, the editors of Ukrayinska Pravda failed to obtain convincing information on this matter. People from the candidate's entourage talk about "sponsorship in the form of broadcasts." Ukrayinska Pravda's sources on TV channels controlled by Viktor Pinchuk also claim that the leadership has an unspoken order to support Arseniy Yatsenyuk.

Judging by the information of Ukrainska Pravda, Leonid Yurushev beat Arseniy Yatsenyuk as the only systemic investor. Apparently, the history of their relationship has banking roots - both Yurushev and Yatsenyuk worked for a long time among bankers and met there.

According to the deputy chairman of the Strong Ukraine party Oleksandra Kuzhel, people's deputy and billionaire Rinat Akhmetov bought Arseniy Yatsenyuk's Front of Changes project.

Election 2015

It is known that Arseniy Yatsenyuk also hired American PR specialists to prepare for the presidential campaign.

It is significant that at the Yalta YES-2013 meeting, the current US Ambassador to Ukraine Geoffrey Pyatt, representing Arseniy Yatsenyuk Hillary Clinton, described him as "the next president of Ukraine."

Arseniy Yatsenyuk's new political and image mentor will be an American specialist who, in particular, developed the campaign of Barack Obama. This is Joe Goldberg, Managing Director of ASGK Public Strategies, BA in Political Science, Communications and Theater Arts, a graduate of the University of Iowa.

Before the American, an employee of the National Democratic Institute for International Affairs (NDI), Serbian Marko Ivkovic, who developed the opposition's election campaign strategy in 2012, managed to work with Arseniy Yatsenyuk.

Leader of the public initiative "Front for Change" since December 2008. Previously - Chairman of the Verkhovna Rada of Ukraine (from December 2007 to November 2008), Minister of Foreign Affairs of Ukraine (2007), First Deputy Head of the Secretariat of the President of Ukraine (2006), Minister of Economy of Ukraine (2005-2006), Deputy Chairman of the Odessa Regional State Administration ( 2005), First Deputy Chairman of the National Bank of Ukraine (2003-2005), Minister of Economy of the Autonomous Republic of Crimea (2001-2003). Candidate of Economic Sciences. In October 2009, he became a candidate for the presidency of Ukraine.

Arseniy Petrovich Yatsenyuk was born on May 22, 1974 in the city of Chernivtsi, Ukrainian SSR. He graduated from school with a silver medal and entered the Chernivtsi State University, where his father taught at the Faculty of History and served as deputy dean. Yatsenyuk chose the faculty of law and the specialty "jurisprudence". In 1996, he graduated from the university and for more than a year headed his law firm Yurek-LTD, which he created in his first year at the university and successfully engaged in the privatization of various industrial and agricultural enterprises.

In January 1998, Yatsenyuk moved to Kyiv, where he got a job as a consultant in the credit department of the joint-stock post-pension bank "Aval". In December 1998, he became an adviser to the chairman of the board of this bank, and in August 2001 - deputy chairman of the board. In 2001, Yatsenyuk graduated from the Chernivtsi Trade and Economic Institute of the Kyiv Trade and Economic University with a degree in Accounting and Audit.

In September 2001, Yatsenyuk took the post of Acting Minister of Economy of the Autonomous Republic of Crimea, and in November 2001 he was approved as Minister of Economy. In January 2003, Yatsenyuk took the post of First Deputy Chairman of the National Bank of Ukraine. In fact, he became the acting chairman of the bank, since the head of the NBU, Serhiy Tigipko, was busy managing the election headquarters of presidential candidate Viktor Yanukovych. March 9, 2005 Yatsenyuk was appointed Deputy Chairman of the Odessa Regional State Administration. From September 27, 2005 to August 4, 2006, Yatsenyuk served as Minister of Economy of Ukraine.

On September 20, 2006, Yatsenyuk became the first deputy head of the Secretariat of the President of Ukraine and the representative of the President of Ukraine Viktor Yushchenko in the Cabinet of Ministers of the Republic. On March 20, 2007, President Yushchenko nominated Yatsenyuk for the post of Minister of Foreign Affairs of the country. The next day, March 21, 2007, Yatsenyuk was confirmed as the Minister of Foreign Affairs of Ukraine, after 426 members of parliament voted for his candidacy.

On September 30, 2007, Yatsenyuk took part in the elections of deputies to the Ukrainian parliament, taking third place in the electoral list of the Our Ukraine - People's Self-Defense bloc (NU-NS). According to the results of the voting, the OU-PSD bloc won 14.15 percent of the vote and 72 deputy mandates, taking third place. Despite the fact that Yanukovych's Party of Regions formally won, it and its potential allies (the Communist Party of Ukraine and the Lytvyn Bloc) lacked several deputy mandates to form a parliamentary majority. After the publication of the first results of the elections, it was announced the formation of a coalition of the Yulia Tymoshenko Bloc and the Our Ukraine - People's Self-Defense bloc. On November 29, 2007, the democratic coalition of the NU-NS and the Yulia Tymoshenko Bloc (BYuT) was officially created.

On December 4, 2007, members of the BYuT and NU-NS factions at a joint meeting nominated Yatsenyuk for the post of head of the Verkhovna Rada of Ukraine. The coalition nominated Yulia Tymoshenko as a candidate for the post of prime minister of the country. On the same day, Yatsenyuk was elected speaker of the Ukrainian parliament by secret ballot on a non-alternative basis. Immediately after his election, representatives of the opposition factions - the Party of Regions, the Communist Party of Ukraine and the Lytvyn Bloc - left the session hall, later explaining their act by violations of the rules of the Verkhovna Rada and the Constitution committed by their opponents during the election of the head of parliament.

On December 9, 2007, Yatsenyuk, in an interview with the Ukrainian TV channel Inter, said that he practically ruled out the possibility that Tymoshenko would not be elected prime minister of Ukraine. However, on the day of the first vote on her candidacy, the parliamentarians did not elect Tymoshenko as the country's prime minister - she was only one vote short of winning. Nevertheless, on December 18, 2007, Tymoshenko was elected Prime Minister of Ukraine.

In mid-August 2008, the conflict between President Yushchenko and Prime Minister Tymoshenko escalated. Disagreements between the prime minister and the president over the conflict in South Ossetia, or rather the unwillingness of Tymoshenko and her supporters to publicly give political assessments of current events, were used as a pretext for making public claims against her. On August 17, 2008, the presidential secretariat, without presenting any evidence, announced the existence of "shadow agreements" between the "Russian leadership" and the Ukrainian prime minister. On September 3, the BYuT, the Party of Regions, the Communists and the Lytvyn Bloc voted for a number of bills that limited the powers of the president and transferred his key powers to the cabinet of ministers, and also simplified the procedure for impeaching the head of state, which gave Yushchenko a reason to accuse Tymoshenko of organizing a coup and trying to establish a "dictatorship of the prime minister" ".

The result of a new round of the struggle for power in Ukraine was the collapse of the "orange coalition": the first to leave it was the Our Ukraine party, which regarded the results of the vote in parliament as a betrayal by the BYuT (the OU-PSD bloc split, because among those who abstained or voted against leaving the coalition turned out to be deputies from the "People's Self-Defense"). On September 16, 2008, at a meeting of the Verkhovna Rada, Yatsenyuk officially announced the termination of the coalition's activities. The next day, he resigned, saying that, in accordance with the requirements of the interim regulations, he intends to continue to lead the parliament until the issue of his resignation from the post of speaker is considered by the Regulations Committee. In the period allotted by the Constitution of the country, the political forces represented in the parliament failed to form a coalition. On October 8, 2008, Yushchenko signed a decree on the early termination of the powers of the parliament and the appointment of extraordinary elections of deputies to the Verkhovna Rada of Ukraine. However, later the president extended the terms of office of the Rada deputies, postponing by his decrees the date of early elections, first from December 7 to December 14, and later to 2009.

On the morning of November 12, 2008, the Verkhovna Rada voted to remove Yatsenyuk from conducting meetings. 231 deputies voted for this, with the required minimum of 226 votes. After this decision, the deputies of the Yulia Tymoshenko Bloc and the opposition Party of Regions staged a brawl sparked by a dispute over how to vote for the speaker's final resignation. In the middle of the day, a vote was held on the issue of removing Yatsenyuk from office: 233 deputies voted for his resignation.

In December of the same year, Yatsenyuk published an article in the Ukrainian newspaper Den. In it, he announced the creation of the Front for Change initiative: "For the time being it is not a party. But there will be a party. It will be built from below, and will not have shareholders and a leader." Speaking about the state of affairs in the country, the politician identified the priority tasks - "17 challenges in 17 years of Ukraine's independence", - among which he named the preservation of democracy, overcoming the economic crisis, the creation of a national idea, the formation of national capital, land relations, the formation of a political nation and renewal political elite. According to Yatsenyuk, it is the Front for Change, which "already has initiative groups in many areas," that should contribute to cardinal changes in the country.

In May 2009, Yatsenyuk announced that he intended to run for president of Ukraine. "I'm not participating in elections, I'm going to win them!" - he announced and expressed confidence that those who want changes in the country will vote for him. Yatsenyuk became the official candidate for the presidency of Ukraine in October 2009 (the politician decided to participate in the presidential elections as an independent candidate).

Yatsenyuk has a PhD in Economics and speaks English. He is married and has two daughters, Kristina and Sofia.

In 1996 he graduated from the Faculty of Law of the Chernivtsi State University with a degree in jurisprudence, in 2001 he graduated from the Chernivtsi Trade and Economic Institute of the Kyiv Trade and Economic University with a degree in accounting and auditing. In 2004 he defended his dissertation and received the degree of candidate of economic sciences.

From December 1992 to September 1997, Arseniy Yatsenyuk was the president of the law firm YUREK-Ltd (Chernivtsi).

In 1998-2001 - consultant of the credit department, adviser to the chairman of the board, deputy chairman of the board of Aval Bank (Kyiv).

In September-November 2001, Yatsenyuk was acting. Minister of Economy of the Autonomous Republic of Crimea (ARC), in November 2001 - January 2003 - Minister of Economy of Crimea.

From January 2003 to February 2005, he worked as First Deputy Chairman of the National Bank of Ukraine (NBU).

In March-September 2005, he was Deputy Chairman of the Odessa Regional State Administration.

From September 2005 to August 2006 - Minister of Economy of Ukraine in the government of Yuriy Yekhanurov.

In 2006-2007 - First Deputy Head of the Secretariat of the President of Ukraine, President's representative in the Cabinet of Ministers.

In March-December 2007, Arseniy Yatsenyuk was the Minister of Foreign Affairs of Ukraine.

In 2007, he was elected a deputy of the Verkhovna Rada of Ukraine of the VI convocation on the list of the Our Ukraine - People's Self-Defense bloc, and on December 4, 2007, he was elected speaker of the Verkhovna Rada of Ukraine.

September 17, 2008 Yatsenyuk resigned from the post of speaker of parliament, in November of the same year he was removed from office.

In 2008-2012 - people's deputy of the Verkhovna Rada of the VI convocation. Leader of the Front for Change party

October 23, 2009 Arseniy Yatsenyuk became a candidate for the presidency of Ukraine.

On January 17, 2010, in the first round of the presidential elections, he took fourth place, gaining 6.96 percent of the vote.

In 2012-2014 - people's deputy of the Verkhovna Rada of the VII convocation, chairman of the parliamentary faction of the All-Ukrainian Union "Batkivshchyna".

Since June 2013 - Chairman of the political council of the Batkivshchyna party.

President of Ukraine Viktor Yanukovych offered the leader of the Batkivshchyna faction Arseniy Yatsenyuk the post of prime minister. Yatsenyuk then refused to head the government.

Prime Minister of Ukraine Arseniy Yatsenyuk resigned in connection with the collapse of the European Choice coalition in the Verkhovna Rada. The Verkhovna Rada of Ukraine at a meeting on July 31 did not accept the resignation.

Year Yatsenyuk left the Batkivshchyna party.

It became known that Arseniy Yatsenyuk and the speaker of the Verkhovna Rada Oleksandr Turchynov headed the new Ukrainian party "People's Front".

According to the results of early elections to the Verkhovna Rada, Yatsenyuk won more than 22% of the votes.

The Verkhovna Rada of the VIII convocation, on the proposal of the President of Ukraine Petro Poroshenko, again appointed Arseniy Yatsenyuk as Prime Minister of Ukraine.

How the hell reacts people's deputy from the OU-PSD Arseniy Yatsenyuk on the topic of his nationality. As funny as it may seem, but looking at the face of Arseniy Petrovich, who panickedly denies being Jewish, one recalls the anecdote that "they hit in the face, not in the passport." This begs the question: why is the obvious (from - visible to the eye) Jew Yatsenyuk so absurdly and so emotionally denies something that does not need proof?

Why does the Jew Yatsenyuk simply desperately insist that he is a third-generation Ukrainian, if the parental tribe closest to him is clearly of Jewish nationality. Moreover, Yatsenyuk's mother, whose maiden name is Bakai, belongs to an ancient Jewish family, which is known to the world thanks to the most authoritative interpreter of the Talmud - Rabbi Bakai.

Maria Grigoryevna with her husband Peter Ivanovich

As you know, the nationality of the Jews is determined by the mother. Why? The thing is that Halakha defines it this way - traditional Jewish law, in the form of a set of laws and regulations of Judaism that regulate the religious, family and social life of believing (!) Jews. In a narrower sense, Halakha is a set of laws contained in the Talmud.

As we see, it is necessary to distinguish between Jews "by blood" and Jews "by spirit". Arseniy Petrovich Yatsenyuk is afraid not so much to recognize his Jewishness in ethnic terms, but rather carefully hides his Judaic worldview and the moral guidelines associated with it, which Senin's ancestor, the famous Rabbi Bakai, so unequivocally and so easily understood even for non-Jews, stated.

Below are quotes from Yatsenyuk's progenitor (with links to sources), who frankly explains to the Jews how they should live, how to act towards "goyim" (non-Jews) and how to be guided by this. We deliberately cite Bakai's mentoring excerpts without comment. Just get a grasp of Yatsenyuk's spiritual heritage, which is the same for him as the Bible is for any Christian:

"Hypocrisy is permissible in the sense that a Jew should appear polite to the wicked, let them honor them and say, 'I love you. This is permitted only if the Jew has need of the wicked, or has reason to fear him; otherwise it is a sin." (Sepher Cadha-Kemach, folio 30, a)

"In order to better deceive the goyim, a Jew can even visit their sick, bury their dead, do good to their poor, but all this must be done in order to have peace, and so that the wicked do no harm to the Jews." (Traite gittin, folio 61, a)

"Just as one can kill a wild beast with a clear conscience and take possession of its forest, one can also kill or expel a goy and take possession of his property. The property of a non-Jew is like an abandoned thing, its real owner is a Jew who will be the first to seize it." (Baba Bathra, folio 54, b; Choschen Michpot, 156, 1)

"So, if a goy steals even less than half a penny, then he is also subject to death for this." (Traite Jebammot, folio 47, b)

“A Jew is allowed to seize, at will, the property of a goy, for where it is written: “do not harm your neighbor,” it does not say: “do not harm a goy.” (Traite Sanhedrin, folio 57, a)

"If a bull belonging to a Jew hits a bull of a goy, then the Jew is not responsible for this, and if the bull of a goy harms the bull of a Jew, the goy must pay the Jew all the loss, for God divided the land and gave the goyim to Israel." (Traite Baba Kamma, folio 37, b)

"God ordered to give money to the goyim in loans, but to give them only for interest; therefore, instead of helping them, we must harm them, even if this person can be useful to us, while with regard to the Jew, we should not act in such a way. manner." (Maimonide, Sepher Mizv., folio 73, 4)

"Their life, O Jew, is in your hands, much less their money." (Explic. du Pentat., folio 213, 4)

Frost on the skin from the fact that "with a clear conscience, you can kill a goy." In this regard, Ratushnyak's fears for the life of the "injured" apologist Yatsenyuk from Uzhgorod turn out to be quite reasonable. Well, organized by Arseniy Petrovich, attacks on their own agitators throughout the country are a mere trifle. Indeed, at the same time, Yatsenyuk does not harm his neighbor, but uses the goyim as slaughtered animals "in order to have peace, and so that the wicked do no harm to the Jews."

And in order not to get dirty from the "wicked", real Jews should marry only real daughters of Israel. And in this respect, Yatsenyuk's choice is simply flawless. As the press dubbed Arseniy Petrovich's wife, Teresia Gur, a "Hassidic princess", since she, to match her husband, also represents an ancient Jewish family.

Arseniy Yatsenyuk with his wife Teresia Viktorovna

Now you understand why the Jew Yatsenyuk so stubbornly proves his "Ukrainian"? The problem is not that Yatsenyuk is Jewish by blood. There is and cannot be anything shameful in this. It would be ignorant in the 21st century to even just raise this topic. But what is truly dangerous is what Arseniy Petrovich believes in and is guided by, shamelessly hiding behind his alleged Greek Catholicism.

True, it looks "shamelessly" for us non-Jews or goyim. And for Yatsenyuk, as we have seen, hypocrisy is quite acceptable and even obligatory. After all, in order to better deceive us goyim, he can even visit our sick, bury our dead, do good to our poor ...