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Yulia Telegina

Yulia Tymoshenko
Юлія Тимошенко

MP
Yulia Tymoshenko 2011.jpg
10th and 13th Prime Minister of Ukraine
In office
18 December 2007 – 4 March 2010
President Viktor Yushchenko
Deputy Oleksandr Turchynov
Preceded by Viktor Yanukovych
Succeeded by Oleksandr Turchynov (Acting)
In office
24 January 2005 – 8 September 2005
Acting 24 January 2005 – 4 February 2005
President Viktor Yushchenko
Deputy Anatoliy Kinakh
Preceded by Mykola Azarov (Acting)
Succeeded by Yuriy Yekhanurov
Minister of Fuel and Energy
In office
30 December 1999 – 19 January 2001
Prime Minister Viktor Yushchenko
Preceded by Aleksey Sheberstov (Energy)
Succeeded by Viktor Yushchenko
Personal details
Born Yulia Volodymyrivna Hrihyan
(1960-11-27) 27 November 1960 (age 56)
Dnipropetrovsk, Soviet Union
(now Ukraine)
Political party Hromada (1997–1999)
Fatherland (1999–present)
Other political
affiliations
Yulia Tymoshenko Bloc (2001–2012)
Dictatorship Resistance Committee (2011–2014)
Spouse(s) Oleksandr Tymoshenko (1979–present)
Children Eugenia
Alma mater National Mining University of Ukraine
Dnipropetrovsk National University
Kyiv National Economic University
Website Official website
Party website
Official Facebook

Yulia Volodymyrivna Tymoshenko (Ukrainian: Ю́лія Володи́мирівна Тимоше́нко, pronounced [ˈjulʲijɐ voɫoˈdɪmɪrʲivnɐ tɪmoˈʃɛnko], née Hrihyan, Грігян, born 27 November 1960) is a Ukrainian politician. She co-led the Orange Revolution and was the first woman appointed Prime Minister of Ukraine, serving from 24 January to 8 September 2005, and again from 18 December 2007 to 4 March 2010.

Tymoshenko is the leader of the All-Ukrainian Union "Fatherland" political party that has 19 seats in parliament and has Tymoshenko as its parliamentary faction leader. In the 2012 Ukrainian parliamentary election the party had received the second most votes, winning 101 of parliament's 450 seats.

In the 2014 Ukrainian presidential election Tymoshenko received 12.81% of the vote, coming in second place after Petro Poroshenko who won the election with 54.7%. Tymoshenko finished second in the Ukrainian presidential election of 2010 runoff, losing by 3.5 percentage points to the winner, Viktor Yanukovych. In the first round she had also finished second.

After the 2010 presidential election, a number of criminal cases were brought against her. On 11 October 2011 she was convicted of embezzlement and abuse of power, and sentenced to seven years in prison and ordered to pay the state $188 million. The prosecution and conviction were viewed as politically biased by many governments – most prominently the European Union, who repeatedly called for the release of Tymoshenko as the primary condition for signing the EU Association Agreement, the US, and international organizations such as Human Rights Watch and Amnesty International. She was released on 22 February 2014, in the concluding days of the Euromaidan revolution, following a revision of the Ukrainian criminal code that effectively decriminalized the actions for which she was imprisoned. The decision was supported by 322 votes. She was officially rehabilitated on 28 February 2014. Just after the Euromaidan revolution, the Ukrainian Supreme Court and European Court of Human Rights closed the case and found that "no crime was committed".


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