Orest Klympush

Orest Klympush (Ukrainian: Орест Дмитрович Климпуш; born 14 February 1941) is a Ukrainian engineer, politician, diplomat. He is a son of Dmytro Klympush, the leader of Carpathian Sich formations of the Carpatho-Ukraine.

Orest Klympush
Орест Климпуш
Minister of Transportation
In office
March 1992  July 1994
Prime MinisterVitold Fokin
Preceded bypost revived
Succeeded byIvan Dankevych
Ambassador of Ukraine to Hungary
(concurrently to Slovenia)
In office
8 December 1997  29 April 2002
PresidentLeonid Kuchma
Preceded byDmytro Tkach
Succeeded byVasyl Durdynets
People's Deputy of Ukraine
2nd convocation
In office
11 May 1994[1]  12 May 1998[1]
ConstituencyIndependent, Zakarpattia Oblast, Rakhiv District No.172[1]
4th convocation
In office
14 May 2002[2]  25 May 2006[2]
ConstituencyIndependent, Zakarpattia Oblast, District No.75[2]
Personal details
Born (1941-02-14) 14 February 1941
Körösmezö, Maramaros County, Hungary
Residence Ukraine

Personal life

Orest Klympush was born during the World War II on 14 February 1941 in Körösmezö, Maramaros County (today, Yasinia, Rakhiv Raion). He graduated from the Kiev Automobile and Highway Institute in 1964 and received his doctorate there in 1970.

In 1987-92 before being appointed the Minister of Transportation, Klympush was a director of the ministerial research institute, the State Automotive Transportation Research and Projection Institute.

gollark: I do generally prefer flying to cars for reasonably long distances, but the whole "security" thing at airports really does a great job at making me reevaluate that. And is not actually improving security at all.
gollark: How does hyperloop compare to regular maglevs?
gollark: The Thought Police ~~would like to~~ know your location.
gollark: Yes.
gollark: It seems like score voting (or approval I guess, easiest change) would be the best system for voting. But there are a lot of annoying tradeoffs and weird issues. Also Arrow's theorem, but IIRC that only affects ranked ones.

See also

References

  1. Profile at the Verkhovna Rada website
  2. Profile at the Verkhovna Rada website
  • Klympush at the Logos-Ukraine Publishing
  • Klympush at the Confederation of Employers of Ukraine
  • Klympush at the dovidka.com.ua
This article is issued from Wikipedia. The text is licensed under Creative Commons - Attribution - Sharealike. Additional terms may apply for the media files.