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Kirill Mazurov

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Premier
  
Nationality
  
Soviet

Preceded by
  
Dmitriy Ustinov

Name
  
Kirill Mazurov


Preceded by
  
Role
  
Politician

Preceded by
  
Aleksey Kleshchev

Succeeded by
  
Kirill Mazurov imagesmediawikisitesthefullwikiorg0816252

Full Name
  
Kirill Trofimovich Mazurov

Born
  
25 March 1914Rudnia-Pribytkovskaya, Homyel Voblast, Imperial Russia (
1914-03-25
)

Political party
  
Communist Party of the Soviet Union

Died
  
December 19, 1989, Moscow, Russia

Kirill Trofimovich Mazurov (Belarusian: Кіры́ла Трафі́мавіч Ма́зураў, Russian: Кирилл Трофимович Мазуров; born 25 March 1914, Homyel Voblast, Belarus – died 19 December 1989) was a Belarusian Soviet politician.

Contents

Political career

Mazurov was originally a construction technician, and graduated from the Homyel highway technical school in 1933. He joined the Communist Party of the Soviet Union in 1940 and the Red Army in 1941. During the Great Patriotic War, he participated in military actions as a political instructor, a battalion commander and an instructor of the army's political department.

Mazurov left the army in 1942 to become secretary of the central committee of the Belarusian Komsomol. Mazurov then moved to a Soviet partisan unit where he became president of the central staff.

After the war, Mazurov returned to his position as secretary of the Belarusian Komsomol. In 1947 he joined the apparatus of the Communist Party of Byelorussia. From 1949 to 1950 he was the First Secretary of the Minsk city committee and from 1950 to 1953 first secretary of the Minsk regional committee of the Communist Party of Byelorussia. From 1950 to 1979, he was deputy of the Supreme Soviet of the Soviet Union. After Joseph Stalin's death, he actively supported Nikita Khrushchev. He was chairman of the council of ministers of BSSR (1953–1965), then First Secretary of the Communist Party of Belarus (1956–1965). In 1964 he was appointed candidate member of the Politburo of the CPSU Central Committee and was then a full member from 26 March 1965 to 27 November 1978. He was also the First Deputy Chairman of the Council of Ministers(1965–1976).

Mazurov retired in 1978.

In the eighties, he gave an interview to Izvestia in which he said he was the envoy of Brezhnev who commanded the Warsaw Pact invasion force in Czechoslovakia in 1968 under the code name "General Trofymov". He said he regretted his action, added "today I would not accept to guide one similar operation" and asked the Czechs to forgive the Soviets. [1]

Decorations

He was awarded the Order of Lenin five times, the Order of the Red Banner, the Order of the Patriotic War 1st class and was a Hero of Socialist Labor in 1971. He received other military medals as well.

References

Kirill Mazurov Wikipedia


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