Yury Petrov (politician, born 1939)
Yury Petrov | |
---|---|
Юрий Петров | |
Kremlin Chief of Staff | |
In office 5 August 1991 – 19 January 1993 | |
President | Boris Yeltsin |
Preceded by | Office established |
Succeeded by | Sergey Filatov |
Ambassador of the Soviet Union to Cuba | |
In office 13 July 1988 – 20 September 1991 | |
Preceded by | Aleksandr Kapto |
Succeeded by | Arnold Kalinin |
Personal details | |
Born | Nizhny Tagil, Sverdlovsk Oblast, RSFSR, Soviet Union | 18 January 1939
Died | 24 October 2013 Moscow, Russia | (aged 74)
Awards | |
Yury Vladimirovich Petrov (Russian: Юрий Владимирович Петров; 18 January 1939 – 24 October 2013) was a Soviet and Russian politician.
Biography
[edit]Yury Petrov was born in Nizhny Tagil.[1] After graduating from high school in 1956, he worked at Uralvagonzavod. In 1957, after the family moved to Sverdlovsk, he worked in the Sverdlovsk design and technology institute of the Ministry of Defense Industry. In 1959 Petrov was conscripted for three-years service in the Soviet Armed Forces, then graduated from the Ural Polytechnic Institute and returned to Nizhny Tagil.[2]
In October 1962 Petrov joined the Communist Party. Since 1967, he had been a party activist in Nizhny Tagil, reaching the post of the first secretary of city's party committee in 1974. Three years later he was elected secretary of the Sverdlovsk regional committee of the CPSU. In April 1985, after the first secretary Boris Yeltsin moved to Moscow to head the construction department of the party's Central Committee, Petrov succeeded him as de facto head of Sverdlovsk Oblast.[2]
In July 1988 he was appointed Ambassador Extraordinary and Plenipotentiary of the USSR to the Republic of Cuba.[2] In the summer of 1991 Yeltsin, now the newly elected president of Russia, has offered Petrov to head his presidential staff, and on 5 August 1991, he was appointed Head of the Presidential Administration of Russia. He spent 17 months in office. Petrov's resignation is explained by his disagreement with the radical neoliberal reformist course, that Yeltsin's government took after the dissolution of the Soviet Union.[3]
From 1993 to 2001 Yury Petrov was chairman of the State Investment Corporation (Gosinkor).[4] He died on 24 October 2013 after a long illness and was buried at the Troyekurovskoye Cemetery in Moscow.[2]
References
[edit]- ^ "Петров Юрий Владимирович". City of Nizhny Tagil, official website (in Russian).
- ^ a b c d "Скончался руководитель ельцинской администрации Юрий Петров". Komsomolskaya Pravda (in Russian). 25 October 2013.
- ^ "За год до смерти сменщик Ельцина Юрий Петров приезжал проститься на Урал". e1.ru (in Russian). 25 October 2013.
- ^ "10 фигур из окружения Бориса Ельцина". Kommersant (in Russian). 6 June 2011.
- Recipients of the Order of the Red Banner of Labour
- 1939 births
- 2013 deaths
- People from Nizhny Tagil
- Ambassadors of the Soviet Union to Cuba
- Eleventh convocation members of the Supreme Soviet of the Soviet Union
- Members of the Central Committee of the 25th Congress of the Communist Party of the Soviet Union
- Members of the Central Committee of the 26th Congress of the Communist Party of the Soviet Union
- Members of the Central Committee of the 27th Congress of the Communist Party of the Soviet Union
- Members of the Supreme Soviet of the Russian Soviet Federative Socialist Republic, 1975–1980
- Members of the Supreme Soviet of the Russian Soviet Federative Socialist Republic, 1985–1990
- Kremlin Chiefs of Staff
- Recipients of the Order of the Badge of Honour
- Burials in Troyekurovskoye Cemetery