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Kazimira Prunskienė

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President
  
Vytautas Landsbergis

Succeeded by
  
Albertas Simenas

Name
  
Kazimira Prunskiene

Preceded by
  
Position established

Alma mater
  
Parents
  
Pranas Stankevicius

Kazimira Prunskiene Kazimira Prunskien vl gydoma Maskvoje velt
Born
  
26 February 1943 (age 81) Svencionys, Soviet Union (now Lithuania) (
1943-02-26
)

Political party
  
Lithuanian People\'s Party

Other politicalaffiliations
  
CPSULithuanian Peasant and Greens Union

Spouse
  
Algimantas Tarvidas (m. 1989)

Education
  
Vilnius University (1960–1965)

Party
  
Communist Party of the Soviet Union

Previous office
  
Children
  
Vaidotas Prunskus, Daivita Jackeviciene, Rasa Vaitkiene

Kazimira Danutė Prunskienė ( pronunciation ) (born 26 February 1943 in Švenčionys district municipality) was the first Prime Minister of Lithuania after the declaration of independence of 11 March 1990 and Minister of Agriculture in the government of Gediminas Kirkilas.

Contents

Kazimira Prunskienė Kaip iandien gyvena K Prunskien DELFI

She was the leader of the Peasants and New Democratic Party Union and the Lithuanian People's Party. From 1981–1986, she worked in West Germany.

Kazimira Prunskienė K Prunskiens snus apie mamos bkl ji susimsiusi igyvena

She ran in the Lithuanian presidential election, 2004 against Valdas Adamkus, hoping to receive votes from supporters of impeached president Rolandas Paksas. She finished in second place in the first round and was defeated in the runoff.

Kazimira Prunskienė Kazimira Prunskien isamiai DELFIlt

Prunskienė is also a member of the Council of Women World Leaders, an International network of current and former women presidents and prime ministers whose mission is to mobilize the highest-level women leaders globally for collective action on issues of critical importance to women and equitable development.

Kazimira Prunskienė Prunskien sveikata politika lsveikatalt

Early life and education

Kazimira Prunskienė httpsuploadwikimediaorgwikipediacommonsthu

Prunskienė was born as Kazimira Danutė Stankevičiūtė in the village of Vasiuliškės. Her father, Pranas Stankevičius, worked as a forest ranger and owned several hectares of land. Known as a jolly musician who played at many instruments at country weddings, including the guitar, fiddle, concertina, and a pipe of his own making, Stankevičius was killed by the NKVD in the Labanoras Forest when Kazimira was just one year old.

Kazimira Prunskienė 4 metai po insulto Kazimira Prunskien sulauk emocij audros

Prunskienė attended the Vilnius University, earning her degree in economics in 1965 and later earned her doctorate from the same university in the same subject during the late 1980s. Afterwards she stayed on at the university as first an instructor, then as a senior associate in the department of industrial economics.

Kazimira Prunskienė Kazimira Prunskiene Alchetron The Free Social Encyclopedia

Before getting her first degree, Prunskienė married Povilas Prunskus. Between 1963 and 1971 she bore three children — a son named Vaidotas and two daughters called Rasa and Daivita. She would later divorce her first husband and remarry in 1989 to Algimantas Tarvidas.

Political career

Prunskienė shifted slowly from university to government circles. Joining the Lithuanian Communist Party in 1980, by 1986 she began acting as the deputy director for the Lithuanian Soviet Socialist Republic's Agricultural Economics Research Institute. In 1988 Prunskienė helped found the grass-roots Lithuanian restructuring movement Sąjūdis, which eventually grew into Lithuania's leading pro-independence group. She was elected to the position of the Prime Minister of the first government on 17 March by the Supreme Council of Lithuania and immediately faced the problems brought on by an economic embargo set in place by Mikhail Gorbachev in an attempt to force Lithuania back under control of the crumbling USSR. Prunskienė flew to countries all over the world, including the United States, to try to gain support for negotiations with Gorbachev about the embargo through such committees as the Helsinki Commission. After nine months in office, Prunskienė resigned and later headed the Department of Agriculture in Lithuania. She was also the leader of the National Farmer's Party, before leaving in 2009. She established the Lithuanian People's Party soon afterwards.

Writings

At the Vital Voices Conferences, held on 10 July 1997 in Vienna, Austria, Prunskienė published The Role Of Women In Democracy: The Experience Of Lithuania. Here she addresses women's vastly unequal pay in comparison to men, the conservative tradition of a Catholic country, and the general status of women and their level of political influence in Lithuania.

References

Kazimira Prunskienė Wikipedia


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