Mykola Porovskyi

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ConstituencyOur Ukraine Bloc, No. 98
Preceded byPosition established
Succeeded byConstituency abolished
Mykola Porovskyi
Микола Поровський
Official portrait, 2005
People's Deputy of Ukraine
In office
August 2005  25 May 2006
ConstituencyOur Ukraine Bloc, No. 98
In office
15 May 1990  29 March 1998
Preceded byPosition established
Succeeded byConstituency abolished
ConstituencyRivne Oblast, Rivne Raion
Personal details
Born (1956-06-20) 20 June 1956 (age 69)
Zaritsk [uk], Ukrainian SSR, Soviet Union (now Ukraine)
PartyRepublican Christian Party (since 1997)
Other political
affiliations
Alma mater
Military service
AllegianceUkraine
Years of service1991–2016
RankColonel
Unit
Battles/wars

Mykola Ivanovych Porovskyi (Ukrainian: Микола Іванович Поровський; born 20 June 1956) is a Ukrainian colonel and politician who served as a People's Deputy of Ukraine from Rivne Oblast between 1990 and 1998, and later from 2005 to 2006 on the proportional list of the Our Ukraine Bloc. Porovskyi was a founding member of the People's Movement of Ukraine, co-founded the Armed Forces of Ukraine and carried the flag of Ukraine into the Verkhovna Rada building following the adoption of the Declaration of Independence of Ukraine in 1991.

Mykola Ivanovych Porovskyi was born 20 June 1956 in the village of Zaritsk [uk] in Ukraine's western Rivne Oblast, which was then part of the Soviet Union. His father, Ivan Yevhenovych Porovskyi, and his mother, Nadiia Ivanivna Porovska, were both ethnic Ukrainians.[1] Mykola's great-great-grandfather, Leon Pokrovskyi, had joined the 1863 January Uprising against the Russian Empire, dying during the uprising. His grandfather, Yevhen, was a veteran of the Ukrainian People's Army and his father fought in the Ukrainian Insurgent Army.[2] He studied at the National University of Water and Environmental Engineering [uk], graduating in 1979 with a specialisation in water engineering.[1] Throughout the 1980s, he worked at several state-owned construction companies throughout western Ukraine. He also joined the Komsomol in 1984.[3]

Political career

Personal life

References

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