Vladimir Antyufeyev
[PHOTO SOURCE: http://blogs.korrespondent.net/blog/politics/3393810/]
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Vladimir Antyufeyev
(Vadim Shevtsov) |
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In
office
September 1992 – December 2011 |
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Personal
details
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Born
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Владимир Антюфéев
19 February 1951 Novosibirsk, Russian SFSR, Soviet Union |
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Nationality
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Russian
Transnistrian |
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Spouse(s)
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Galina Antyufeyeva
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Vladimir Antyufeyev (Russian: Владимир Антюфéев),
also known under the assumed name Vadim Shevtsov (born 19 February 1951)
is a former Soviet OMON police officer who was one of organizers of the
attempt to overthrow the Latvian government in 1991. As "Vadim
Shevtsov", he was later the head of the Ministry of State Security
of Moldova's pro-Moscow separatist state of Transnistria
between 1992 and 2012. He is a Russian and Transnistrian citizen and was for
many years wanted by the law enforcement agencies of Latvia and Moldova. He is
no longer wanted by the Latvians however due to their statute of limitations on
the type of crime he was alleged to have committed. In July 2014, Antyufeyev became
one of leaders of Ukraine's pro-Russia secessionist rebels.
Life
and career
Antyufeyev
was born in Novosibirsk, Russian
SFSR, Soviet Union. In 1974, he graduated from a police academy in Minsk, Byelorussian
SSR.
He
is a former Soviet OMON
special police major and Riga police deputy chief of criminal investigation. He served as
Riga OMON commander in 1990-1991. In August 1990, Antyufeyev was one of the
organizers of a meeting of the Latvian MVD where some 80% of
the Latvian police force made a decision not to recognize the Popular Front of Latvia government and
follow the Constitution of the Soviet Union instead.
These police forces would later be involved in the KGB-led failed
pro-unity coup attempt in January 1991. For these actions the Latvian
government accused Antyufeyev of "crimes against the state" in August
1991. He says he fled to Moscow two hours before he was to be arrested.
In
Russia, Antyufeyev was assisted by Viktor
Alksnis, on whose recommendation he traveled to Tiraspol to
take part in the Transnistrian independence movement in September 1991.
Adopting a new name, "Vadim Shevtsov," Antyufeyev played a key role
in forming the internal affairs and security organizations of the Transnistrian
government, especially the Ministry of State Security,
which he headed. Shevtsov's real identity was revealed by Aleksandr
Lebed in 1997.
In
2003 Antyufeyev defended a doctoral thesis on "Russia's Geostrategy in the
Southwest" at the Russian
Presidential Academy of National Economy and Public Administration.
In
2004, the prosecutor of
Moldova indicted Antyufeyev for crimes against the Moldovan state and
freeing an officer accused of several assassinations. That same year, Vladimir
Antyufeyev was declared persona
non grata by the European Union.
He
married Galina Antyufeyeva, a deputy in the Transnistrian Supreme Soviet and head
of the committee on legislation. Antyufeyev has stated: "We pose a real
problem to Moldova.
My life's purpose is to save this land [Transnistria] for Russia." In
early 2012, he was dismissed by the incumbent president Yevgeny
Shevchuk and a criminal investigation was launched against him, alleging
abuse of power, misappropriation of public funds and destruction of documents.
Antyufeyev
based himself in Moscow in 2012. He said he worked on security in South
Ossetia, Abkhazia,
and Crimea. In
July 2014, he appeared in eastern
Ukraine as the "deputy prime minister" of the Donetsk People's Republic (DPR). The DPR
head Alexander Borodai met him in Moscow and put him in charge of the rebel security forces
(taking over from Alexander Khodakovsky), internal affairs, and courts of
justice. The European Union named Antyufeyev in its list of sanctioned
individuals. In a mid-August 2014 interview with Novaya
Gazeta Antyufeyev claimed "Nobody's to blame that our banks,
shops, the airport [in Donetsk] are
closed — except for the Ukrainian fascists and the masons
of the U.S. and Europe".
INTERNET
SOURCE: https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Vladimir_Antyufeyev
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