Dmytro Svyatash

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Template:Eastern Slavic name

Dmytro Svyatash
Дмитро Святаш
Personal details
Born (1971-07-15) 15 July 1971 (age 52)
Kharkiv, Ukraine
Political partyParty of Regions
Website[svyatash.org]

Dmytro Svyatash (Ukrainian: Дмитро Володимирович Святаш; 15 of June, 1971, Kharkiv, Ukraine) - Ukrainian social and political activist, member of Party of Regions, Svyatash was from May 2002 until July 2019 member of the Ukrainian parliament.[1]

Life

Svyatash was born in Kharkiv in 1971 in a family of doctor Vladimir Nikolaevich Svyatash. The family lives in Kharkiv from the postwar years. In 1988, Dmitriy graduated the high school № 1 named after Lenin. In 1994, he graduated the Kharkiv Medical Institute, specializing in pediatrics. In 2001, he completed his studies as a lawyer at the National Yaroslav Mudry Law Academy. A year earlier, Svyatash graduated economic at the Institute for Advanced Studies and Retraining heavy machinery. Then in 2007, he graduated the Kharkiv Regional Institute on Public Administration degree.

Political career

In March 2002, gaining 24% of the votes, Svyatash was elected as a deputy of Ukraine from 171 majority districts (Moskovsky district of Kharkiv). He became a member of the Committee on Finance and Banking. In 2004, he was a trustee of presidential candidate Viktor Yanukovych. In 2005 Svyatash became a member of the Party of Regions. In 2006, he became Vice-Chairman of the Committee on Finance and Banking. After the 2007 elections in the ranks of Party of Regions, he becomes the head of the subcommittee on taxation of non-market financial institutions and entities of the stock market of the Committee on Taxation and Customs Policy.

On February 18, 2014, Svyatash was under suspicion of wanting to leave the country, when protesters of the Euromaidan movement refused him entry to his house, and brought him to nearby Bertuk. (https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=1YtelP6DPBE)

In the 2014 Ukrainian parliamentary election, Svyatash was re-elected into the Ukrainian parliament as a non-partisan after winning a single-member districts seat in Kharkiv with 34.01% of the votes.[2]

In the 2019 Ukrainian parliamentary election Svyatash lost re-election as an Opposition Platform — For Life candidate in his Kharkiv single-seat constituency.[3]

References