Serhiy Ivanov

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Preceded byLeonid Zhunko
Succeeded bySerhiy Kunitsyn
Preceded byConstituency established
Succeeded byConstituency abolished
Serhiy Ivanov
Сергій Іванов
Official portrait, 2002
Chairman of the Sevastopol City State Administration
In office
4 February 2005  31 May 2006
Preceded byLeonid Zhunko
Succeeded bySerhiy Kunitsyn
People's Deputy of Ukraine
In office
12 May 1998[1]  7 July 2005[2]
Preceded byConstituency established
Succeeded byConstituency abolished
ConstituencyAutonomous Republic of Crimea, No. 3
Personal details
Born (1952-01-21) 21 January 1952 (age 74)
PartyIndependent
Alma materSimferopol State University

Serhiy Anatoliiovych Ivanov (Ukrainian: Сергій Анатолійович Іванов; born 21 January 1952) is a Ukrainian politician.

In 2005-06 he served as a Chairman of the Sevastopol City State Administration.[3] He had previously served as a People's Deputy of Ukraine in the Verkhovna Rada from 1998 to 2005.

Ivanov was born on 21 January 1952 in Tokmak, which was then part of the Ukrainian SSR in the Soviet Union.[3] He first graduated from Tokmak Mechanical College, and then worked at the Tokmak Diesel Plant named after S. Kirov and completed his mandatory military service in the Soviet Armed Forces.[3] In 1977, he completed his degree to become a lawyer at Simferopol State University, and was then briefly a teacher before joining the Central District Department of Internal Affairs for Simferopol.[3] By 1980, he had become Deputy Head of Criminal Investigation, before he switched to join the MIA Crimea Regional Executive Committee, first as an inspector.[3] In 1982, he graduated from the Kyiv Higher School of the Ministry of Internal Affairs.[3] By the collapse of the Soviet Union, he had become a Senior Commissioner for the Department for Combating Theft of Socialist Property.[3]

After 1991, he continued to work in the now Autonomous Republic of Crimea in Ukraine.[3] He worked within the Main Director of the MIA of Ukraine as the Head of the Department for Combating Organized Crime, and then from 1994 up until his election to the Rada he was Head of the Department for Combating Corruption and Crime in Crimea.[3]

Political career

References

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