Federal Customs Service of Russia

The Federal Customs Service of Russia (Russian: Федеральная таможенная служба Российской Федерации, Federalnaya tamozhennaya sluzhba Rossiskoy Federatsii; abbreviated ФТС России, FTS Rossii) is a Russian government service regulating customs.

Federal Customs Service of Russia
Федеральная таможенная служба
Emblem of the Federal Customs Service
Flag of the Federal Customs Service, 1994
Agency overview
Formed1994
Preceding agency
  • USSR Customs Committee
Jurisdictional structure
Federal agencyRUS
Operations jurisdictionRUS
Governing bodyGovernment of Russia
General nature
Operational structure
HeadquartersNovozavodskaya Ul. 11/5, Moscow, Russia
Elected officer responsible
Agency executive
  • Vladimir Bulavin [1], Director
Parent agencyGovernment of Russia
Website
http://www.customs.ru

Since May 12, 2006, it has been led by Andrey Belyaninov and under direct authority of the Government of Russia. Until 2006, the Federal Customs Service of Russia was under the responsibility of the Ministry for Economic Development.

History

The Customs Services in Russia were formed in 1865, as The Customs Department of the Ministry of Finance.

In 1917 the Soviet Customs Service was operated as The Main Directorate for Customs Control as part of the MKTP - The People's Commissariat for Trade and Industry.

In 1991, The Soviet Customs was replaced with The State Customs Committee (GTK) under the Ministry for Economic Development and in 2006 the GTK was renamed to current name.

Heads of Customs of Russia

State Customs Committee

  • Mikhail Vanin (1999 - 2004)

Federal Customs Service

  • Aleksander Zherikhov (2004 - 2006)
  • Andrey Belyaninov (2006 - 2016)
  • Vladimir Bulavin (since 2016)
gollark: Er, 3, then.
gollark: -5.
gollark: What is this "httyd"?
gollark: 72 quadrillion CB white dragons?
gollark: Massbreed of commons.

See also

References

International agencies comparable to FTS



This article is issued from Wikipedia. The text is licensed under Creative Commons - Attribution - Sharealike. Additional terms may apply for the media files.