Chief of Staff to the President of Belarus explained
The Chief of Staff to the President of Belarus also known as the Head of the Presidential Administration (Russian: Глава Администрации президента Республики Беларусь) is the head of the Presidential Administration of Belarus. The position was created by President Lukashenko in July 1994. The Chief of Staff is responsible for general management of presidential activity. The incumbent Chief of Staff is Dmitry Krutoi, who assumed the position in June 2024.[1]
The following responsibilities are entrusted to the chief of staff:[2]
- Providing management of the departments heads;
- Allocate responsibilities to Deputy Chief of Staff;
- Coordinate the activities of Presidential aids and advisors;
- Enact the proposal of draft laws, decrees and orders;
- Presents candidates for official positions;
Office holders
| Portrait | Chief | Term of office | President |
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1 | | | 22 July 1994 — 10 October 1995 | Alexander Lukashenko |
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2 | | Mikhail Myasnikovich[3] | 10 October 1995 — 12 September 2001 | Alexander Lukashenko |
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3 | | Ural Latypov[4] | 12 September 2001 — 29 November 2004 | Alexander Lukashenko |
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4 | | Viktar Sheyman[5] | 29 November 2004 — 5 January 2006 | Alexander Lukashenko |
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5 | | [6] | 5 January 2006 — 8 July 2008 | Alexander Lukashenko |
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6 | | Uladzimir Makey | 8 July 2008 — 20 August 2012[7] | Alexander Lukashenko |
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7 | | Andrei Kobyakov[8] | 27 August 2012 — 27 December 2014 | Alexander Lukashenko |
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8 | | | 27 December 2014 — 5 December 2016 | Alexander Lukashenko |
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9 | | Natallya Kachanava | 21 December 2016 — 5 December 2019 | Alexander Lukashenko |
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10 | | [9] | 5 December 2019 — 29 March 2024 | Alexander Lukashenko |
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11 | | | 27 June 2024 — present | Alexander Lukashenko | |
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First Deputy Heads
- (15 July 1995 — 5 March 1997)
- Uladzimir Rusakevich (15 July 1997 — 19 June 2000)
- Vladimir Zametalin (19 June 2000 — 12 September 2001)
- Stanislav Knyazev (12 September 2001 — 25 March 2003)
- (18 August 2003 — 4 January 2006)
- Anatoli Rubinov (4 January 2006 — 30 October 2008)
- Natallya Pyatkyevich (9 January 2009 — 28 December 2010)
- Alexander Radkov[10] [11] /Konstantin Martynetsky (28 December 2010 — 5 December 2016)
- (21 December 2016 — 27 June 2024)
- Natallya Pyatkyevich (27 June 2024 — present)
Notes and References
- Web site: Senior Officials of the Belarus President Administration. president.gov.by.
- Web site: Администрация Президента Республики Беларусь. www.pravo.by.
- News: Belarus president names new PM. Al Jazeera. 28 December 2010. 28 December 2014.
- Web site: краткая биография Урала Латыпова.
- Web site: Who is who in Belarus . 2010-07-24 . 2007–2009 . Марат . dead . https://web.archive.org/web/20100806190653/http://who.bdg.by/obj.php?kod=362 . August 6, 2010 .
- Web site: Геннадий Невыглас: После проигрыша итальянцам Лукашенко сказал: "Проиграли колхозной команде" . 2018-11-08. 2016-04-26 . tribuna.com.
- Web site: Minister and Deputy Ministers - Ministry of Foreign Affairs of the Republic of Belarus. mfa.gov.by. 2020-04-10. 2011-04-04. https://web.archive.org/web/20110404071240/http://mfa.gov.by/en/ministry/staff/. dead.
- Web site: Prime Minister of the Republic of Belarus. Council of Ministers of the Republic of Belarus.
- Web site: Belarus: introducing elements of the state of emergency . 2022-07-28 . en.
- http://electionguide.org/election.php?ID=1949 Election Profile
- https://archive.today/20121126235607/http://sharkovshchina.vitebsk-region.gov.by/en/news/republic?id=9559 Alexander Radkov: No personal success without love for one’s own country