Panas Lyubchenko

Panas Lyubchenko

Panas Lyubchenko, 1937, January
3rd Chairman of the Council of People's Commissars of the Ukrainian SSR
In office
28 April 1934  30 August 1937
Preceded by Vlas Chubar
Succeeded by Mykhailo Bondarenko
Personal details
Born (1897-01-14)14 January 1897
Kaharlyk, Kiev Governorate
Died 28 August 1937(1937-08-28) (aged 40)
Moscow, Russian SFSR
Political party SR (Ukraine) (1917-1919)
Ukrainian Communist Party (Borotbists) (1919-1920)
Communist Party (Bolsheviks) of Ukraine (1920-1937)
All-Union Communist Party (bolsheviks) (1920-1937)
Alma mater Kiev Military Nursing School
Signature

Panas Petrovych Lyubchenko (Ukrainian: Панас Петрович Любченко; 14 January 1897 - 29 August 1937) was a Ukrainian and Soviet politician, who served as the Chairman of the Council of People's Commissars of Ukrainian SSR (today's equivalent of prime-minister) from 1934 to 1937.[1]

Panas Lyubechenko was a member of the Ukrainian Central Council.

In 1937, Lyubechenko shot his wife Maria Nikolaevna Krupenyk and then committed suicide after he was accused of treason by colluding with Ukrainian separatists who wished to detach Ukraine from the Soviet Union. Lyubechenko denied the allegations.

Biography

Oleksandr Liashko was born in a peasant family in a town of Kagarlik, Kiev region.

References

Political offices
Preceded by
Vlas Chubar
Prime Minister of Ukraine (Ukrainian SSR)
19341937
Succeeded by
Mikhail Bondarenko


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