Nina Karpachova

Nina Karpachova (Ukrainian: Ніна Іванівна Карпачова; born 12 August 1957, Ceadîr-Lunga) is a Ukrainian lawyer and politician. She was Ukrainian Parliament Commissioner for Human Rights[1] from 1998 until 2012.

Nina Karpachova
Ніна Карпачова
Ombudsman of Ukraine
In office
1998–2012
Preceded bypost created
Succeeded byValeriya Lutkovska
Personal details
Born
Nina Ivanivna Karpachova

(1957-08-12) August 12, 1957
Ceadîr-Lunga, Gagauzia, Moldavian SSR
NationalityUkrainian
Political partyParty of Regions
Other political
affiliations
KP(b)U
Alma materKiev University
Occupationpolitician, administrator

Before politics

Karpachova attended Kiev University and completed a post-graduate course of the Academy of Social Sciences in Moscow (1991).

Political career

Election

She was elected a deputy in the Ukrainian Verkhovna Rada (parliament) in 1994 for the Alushta No. 28 single-member electoral district in the Autonomous Republic of Crimea as independent.

Human rights

Soon after her election she was appointed deputy head of parliament's committee for human rights, national minorities and international relations. Karpachova has been active in adopting international human rights standards into national legislation.

Karpachova has headed a number of governmental and parliamentary delegations of Ukraine at international and European conferences on human rights issues. In 1995 she coordinated parliamentary hearings for Ukraine's ratification process of the United Nations Convention on the Elimination of All Forms of Discrimination Against Women. On her initiative the National Centre of the Adoption of Orphan Children was established in 1996 under the Ministry of Education.

Legislation

Karpachova is the author of four draft laws adopted by parliament:

  • Adoption of Orphan Children (part of the Marriage and Family Code)
  • Judicial Procedure of the Adoption of Orphan Children (part of the Civil Procedure Code)
  • Law on the Ukrainian Parliament Commissioner for Human Rights
  • Article 1241 of Criminal Code, establishing criminal liability for trafficking in human beings

From 1996 to 1998, Karpachova was vice-president of the World Congress of Ukrainian Lawyers, when she was appointed the first Ukrainian Parliament Commissioner for Human Rights. In 1999 she also was named head of the National Coordination Council for the Prevention of Trafficking in Human Beings. She became a member of the European Ombudsman Institute in 1999 and the International Ombudsman Institute in 2000.

Influence

Karpachova is one of the most influential woman in Ukraine according to the Ukrainian magazine Focus. She placed among the top 10 most influential women in 2006, 2009, and 2010.[2]

gollark: It might not be that bad. It's clearly worth it in this case.
gollark: It's just not optimized for GUI management, and haven't you yourself complained about Wine being bad?
gollark: Well, it's much more stable, you can manage it with a GUI, all your favourite Windows programs run on it, it has good things like IIS, etc.
gollark: Well, not not doing that.
gollark: That is your fault. Try not doing that.

References

Political offices
New office Ombudsman of Ukraine
1998–2012
Succeeded by
Valeriya Lutkovska
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