Stanislav Shushkevich
Template:Short description Script error: No such module "Unsubst". Template:Family name hatnote Script error: No such module "infobox".Script error: No such module "Check for unknown parameters".Script error: No such module "Check for conflicting parameters". Template:Socialism in BelarusStanislav Stanislavovich ShushkevichTemplate:Efn (15 December 1934 – 3 May 2022) was a Belarusian politician and scientist who served as the first head of state of independent Belarus after it seceded from the Soviet Union, serving as the first chairman of the Supreme Soviet (also called chairman of Parliament or president) from 1991 to 1994. He supported social democratic reforms and played a key role in the creation of the Commonwealth of Independent States. He later became an opposition leader against Alexander Lukashenko.
As a scientist, he was a corresponding member of the Belarusian Academy of Sciences, Doctor in Physics and Mathematics, recipient of various state awards, professor and the author and originator of textbooks and over 150 articles and 50 inventions.
Biography
Shushkevich was born on 15 December 1934, in Minsk. His parents were teachers who came from peasant families. His father, poet Stanislau Petrovich Shushkevich (born 19 February 1908 in Minsk) was arrested in the 1930s and was released from prison in 1956 (but completely exonerated only in 1975). His mother, writer[1] Helena Romanowska was ethnically Polish and her family had szlachta (noble) roots. During World War II Shushkevich lived with his mother and grandmother in Nazi-occupied Minsk, with a Jewish boy hiding in their house.[2]
After finishing school with a medal in 1951, he entered the Faculty of Physics and Mathematics of the Belarusian State University and graduated in 1956. He subsequently studied at the graduate school of the Institute of Physics of the Belarusian Academy of Sciences, conducting research in the field of radio electronics.[2]
In the early 1960s, while working as an engineer in an electronics factory, he was in charge of teaching the Russian language to John F. Kennedy's assassin Lee Harvey Oswald, when Oswald lived in Minsk.[3][4] This is confirmed by a CIA document, RIF #104-10014-10053.
He was married to his wife Irina from 1976 onward. According to him, she forced him to start a healthy lifestyle. They had a son named Stanislav and daughter named Elena.[5][6] Shushkevich was admitted to hospital and placed in an intensive care unit in April 2022, due to complications from COVID-19.[7] On the night of May 3, Shushkevich died in Minsk.[8][9]
Political activity
When Supreme Soviet chairman Nikolai Dementey was ousted for his support of the August 1991 coup attempt, Shushkevich became interim speaker,[10] and presided over Belarus voting to secede from the Soviet Union. He thus became the newly minted nation's first leader. On 18 September, Shushkevich was elected Chairman of the Supreme Soviet.[11]
On 8 December 1991, in Belavezhskaya Pushcha and together with the leaders of Russia (Boris Yeltsin) and Ukraine (Leonid Kravchuk), he signed a declaration that the Soviet Union was dissolved and replaced by the Commonwealth of Independent States; the declaration later became known as the "Belovezh Accords".
Shushkevich had the vestigial Soviet nuclear arsenal (both tactical and strategic) withdrawn from Belarus, without preconditions or compensation from Russia or the West. However, other reforms became stalled due to the opposition from a hostile parliament as well as from Prime Minister Vyacheslav Kebich.Script error: No such module "Unsubst".
In late 1993, Alexander Lukashenko, the then-chairman of the anti-corruption committee of the Belarusian parliament, accused 70 senior government officials, including Shushkevich, of corruption, including stealing state funds for personal purposes. Lukashenko's accusations forced a vote of confidence, which Shushkevich lost. Shushkevich was replaced by Vyacheslav Kuznetsov and later by Myechyslau Hryb.Script error: No such module "Unsubst".
At the 1994 Belarusian presidential election (the first one after the secession from the Soviet Union), six candidates stood, including Lukashenko, Shushkevich and Kebich, with the latter regarded as the clear favorite. In the first round Lukashenko won 45% of the vote against 17% for Kebich, 13% for Paznyak and 10% for Shushkevich.
In 2002 Shushkevich sued the Belarusian Ministry of Labor and Social Security: due to inflation, his retirement pension as a former head of state was the equivalent of US$1.80 monthly.[12][13] To earn income, Shushkevich lectured extensively in foreign universities including in Poland, the United States and Asian countries.
In 2004 he attempted to participate in parliamentary elections, but was refused registration by the electoral commission.Script error: No such module "Unsubst".
He continued to be active in politics,[3][14] heading the Belarusian Social Democratic Assembly party from 1998 until 2018.
Awards and decorations
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- 1982, Honored Worker of Science and Technology of the BSSR
- 1997, Polish Prize of Jan Nowak-Jeziorański
- 6 July 2010, Lithuanian presidential Order of Vytautas the Great, "for active support of the independence of Lithuania in 1991"
- 2012, Truman-Reagan Medal of Freedom[15]
- 2018, Belarusian Democratic Republic 100th Jubilee Medal, "for contribution to the Belarusian democracy and independence"
Notes
References
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- ↑ Умер первый глава независимой Беларуси Станислав Шушкевич
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- ↑ Умер первый глава независимой Белоруссии Станислав Шушкевич
- ↑ Ex-Belarus leader Shushkevich, the man who sacked Gorbachev, dies at 87
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External links
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- Pages with script errors
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- 1934 births
- 2022 deaths
- Politicians from Minsk
- Scientists from Minsk
- Chairmen of the Supreme Council of Belarus
- Presidents of Belarus
- Soviet engineers
- Belarusian people of Polish descent
- Belarusian Roman Catholics
- Belarusian Social Democratic Assembly politicians
- Candidates for President of Belarus
- Belarusian State University alumni
- Deaths from the COVID-19 pandemic in Belarus