Russia's ex-PM Chernomyrdin dies at 72
VIKTOR Chernomyrdin, who served as Russia's prime minister in the 1990s as the country was developing as a market economy, died yesterday. He was 72.
No cause of death has been released, but Chernomyrdin had grown thin in recent years and was said to have been ill.
President Dmitry Medvedev sent his condolences to his family and friends. The president also ordered his chief of staff to organize Chernomyrdin's funeral tomorrow, which will be shown live on national television.
Chernomyrdin helped see Russia through some difficult times, including the 1990s economic devastation and the war in Chechnya, and was much loved by Russians.
Born in a Siberian village, he was a bear of a man with an everyman's charm. He also had a knack for amusing his countrymen by bursting out with colorful, nongrammatical expressions. His statement that "we wanted the best but it turned out as always" is now part of Russian culture.
Chernomyrdin rose through the ranks of the Communist Party to head the Soviet oil and gas ministry from 1985 to 1989.
He was appointed prime minister by then President Boris Yeltsin in 1992 and held the post until March 1998. Following the financial crash of August 1998, when Russia defaulted on its debts and devalued its currency, Yeltsin asked him to return as prime minister, but the parliament refused to confirm him.
After Vladimir Putin became president, he appointed Chernomyrdin as ambassador to Ukraine in 2001, a move seen as an effort to distance a political heavyweight from Moscow. He remained in his post of ambassador until last?year.
No cause of death has been released, but Chernomyrdin had grown thin in recent years and was said to have been ill.
President Dmitry Medvedev sent his condolences to his family and friends. The president also ordered his chief of staff to organize Chernomyrdin's funeral tomorrow, which will be shown live on national television.
Chernomyrdin helped see Russia through some difficult times, including the 1990s economic devastation and the war in Chechnya, and was much loved by Russians.
Born in a Siberian village, he was a bear of a man with an everyman's charm. He also had a knack for amusing his countrymen by bursting out with colorful, nongrammatical expressions. His statement that "we wanted the best but it turned out as always" is now part of Russian culture.
Chernomyrdin rose through the ranks of the Communist Party to head the Soviet oil and gas ministry from 1985 to 1989.
He was appointed prime minister by then President Boris Yeltsin in 1992 and held the post until March 1998. Following the financial crash of August 1998, when Russia defaulted on its debts and devalued its currency, Yeltsin asked him to return as prime minister, but the parliament refused to confirm him.
After Vladimir Putin became president, he appointed Chernomyrdin as ambassador to Ukraine in 2001, a move seen as an effort to distance a political heavyweight from Moscow. He remained in his post of ambassador until last?year.
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