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Vytenis Andriukaitis

Vytenis Andriukaitis
Vytenis Povilas Andriukaitis.jpg
European Commissioner for Health and Food Safety
Assumed office
1 November 2014
President Jean-Claude Juncker
Preceded by Tonio Borg (Health)
Minister of Health
In office
13 December 2012 – 14 July 2014
President Dalia Grybauskaitė
Prime Minister Algirdas Butkevičius
Preceded by Raimondas Šukys
Succeeded by Rimantė Šalaševičiūtė
Personal details
Born Vytenis Povilas Andriukaitis
(1951-08-09) 9 August 1951 (age 65)
Kyusyur, Soviet Union
(now Russia)
Political party Social Democratic Party
Spouse(s) Irena Meižytė
Children 3
Alma mater Lithuanian University of Health Sciences
Vilnius University

Vytenis Povilas Andriukaitis (born 9 August 1951) is Lithuania's European Commissioner, a heart surgeon, and a co-signatory to the 1990 Act of the Re-Establishment of the State of Lithuania.

Andriukaitis' family was deported to Siberia in June 1941. He, his mother and two older brothers were allowed to return to Lithuania in 1958; his father returned in 1959. After excelling at school, he enrolled at Kaunas Medical Institute, graduating in 1975. In 1976 Andriukaitis started his career in politics as a member of the underground Social Democrat movement, but later continued his studies by pursuing a degree in History at Vilnius University, graduating in 1984.

Andriukaitis was elected to the Supreme Council of the Republic of Lithuania, which preceded Seimas (Lithuanian Parliament), in 1990. Andriukaitis was a Member of the Lithuanian Parliament for six terms, from 1992 to 2004 and from 2008 to 2012, and was a Deputy Chairman of its Council from 2001 to 2004. He was a Health Minister of the Republic of Lithuania since December 2012 until the European Commission President Jean-Claude Juncker has appointed him to serve as an EU Commissioner in November 2014.

Vytenis Povilas Andriukaitis was born in Kyusyur, Yakut Autonomous Soviet Socialist Republic, USSR. His father, Alfonsas Andriukaitis and mother Liuda Andriukaitienė, pregnant at the time, together with two small children were deported from Lithuania to Siberia by Soviet Communists in June 1941. While there, they only had access to Russian literature; Andriukaitis learned Lithuanian from his mother, who would write down Lithuanian fairy tales, which he would later read.


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