Anatoly Bibilov

President of South Ossetia from 2017 to 2022 From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

Anatoly Ilyich Bibilov[a] (born 6 February 1970) is a South Ossetian military officer, was the fourth president of South Ossetia. He succeeded Leonid Tibilov as president on 21 April 2017 to 24 May 2022, following his election victory, but was defeated by Alan Gagloev in the 2022 election.

Quick facts 4th President of South Ossetia, Prime Minister ...
Anatoly Bibilov
Bibilov in 2018
4th President of South Ossetia
In office
21 April 2017  24 May 2022
Prime Minister
Preceded byLeonid Tibilov
Succeeded byAlan Gagloev
Speaker of the Parliament
In office
24 June 2014  21 April 2017
Preceded byStanislav Kochiev
Succeeded byInal Mamiev
Personal details
Born (1970-01-13) 13 January 1970 (age 56)
PartyUnited Ossetia
Ryazan Higher Airborne Command School
Military service
Branch/service Soviet Army
Armed Forces of South Ossetia
Russian Airborne Troops
Years of service
Soviet Union (1988—1991)
Russia (1991—1994)
South Ossetia (1994—1996)
Russia (1998—2008)
RankLieutenant General
Close

Biography

Bibilov was born in the South Ossetian AO of the Georgian SSR in the Soviet Union.[1] After eight grade he went to a boarding school in Tbilisi with intensive military and physical training, thereafter he joined the Ryazan Higher Airborne Command School.[1] After graduating, Bibilov was distributed to the 76th Guards Air Assault Division. His division was included in the consolidated battalion of peacekeepers in South Ossetia. Subsequently he joined the South Ossetian Army,[1] commanding a special forces unit. Between the period 1998-2008 he rejoined the peacekeeping forces, this time in a North Ossetia battalion. Bibilov took an active part in the Russo-Georgian War, organizing the defence of one of the districts of Tskhinvali against the Georgian Armed Forces.[1]

Politics

Bibilov at the 2020 Moscow Victory Day Parade on Red Square

In October 2008 he was appointed Minister of Emergency Situations of South Ossetia. Bibilov was the presidential candidate for the Unity Party in the South Ossetian presidential election, 2011.[1] He won the first round, but lost the runoff to Alla Dzhioyeva.

Soon however, the parliament of South Ossetia declared the elections invalid.[2] Leonid Tibilov was ultimately elected president after winning the South Ossetian presidential election, 2012, which Bibilov did not participate in.[1] In June 2014 he was elected as the president of the parliament of South Ossetia. He is currently the head of the United Ossetia party, which nominated him for their candidate to the South Ossetian presidential election, 2017.[3] Bibilov won the election in the first round by getting 54.8% of the vote and took office as the 4th president of South Ossetia on 21 April 2017.[4][5] During his inauguration, delegations from the Nagorno-Karabakh Republic, the Donetsk and Lugansk People's Republics and Russia were present.[6]

Bibilov supports South Ossetia joining Russia,[7][8] and has called for a referendum on the issue.[9]

One of the controversies of Bibilov's late tenure would be the Ministry of Construction's construction of a gym for the secondary school of Tsinagari. The School's director, former Member of Parliament Lasko Gussoev was able to bring the issue to national prominence stating that the Ministry of Construction built the gym, but did not install a transformer or other electoral components rendering the gym inoperable. It would take over 2 years of Gussoev's lobbying and significant media coverage before the gym was completed.[10]

Bibilov was defeated by Alan Gagloyev in the 2022 election.[11]

Cabinet

During his tenure as President, Bibilov's cabinet consisted of the following:

More information Position, Name ...
Position Name
Minister of Culture Zhanna Zasseeva[12]
Minister of the Economy Gennady Kokoev[12]
Minister of Education Natali Gasieva (2017-2021)[12]
Minister of Emergency Situations Alan Tadtaev[12]
Minister of Finance Aza Khabalova[12]
Minister of Foreign Affairs Dmitry Medoev[12]
Minister of Justice Zalina Lalieva[12]
Close

Sanctions

In September 2015, he was included in the sanctions list of Ukraine. Bibilov was recognized as a person who creates "real and/or potential threats to national interests, national security, sovereignty and territorial integrity of Ukraine." Bibilov probably fell under this definition because of repeated visits to the unrecognized DPR and LPR, as well as to Crimea.[13]

Awards

Personal life

He is married with four children.[15][16]

Notes

References

Related Articles

Wikiwand AI