Stepan Sukhorenko
| Stepan Nikolaevich Sukhorenko | |
|---|---|
| Сцяпа́н Мікала́евіч Сухарэ́нка Степан Николаевич Сухоренко | |
| Sukhorenko in 2015 in Armenia. | |
| Chairman of the State Security Committee of the Republic of Belarus | |
| In office 20 January 2005 – 17 July 2007 | |
| President | Alexander Lukashenko | 
| Prime Minister | Sergei Sidorsky | 
| Preceded by | Leonid Erin | 
| Succeeded by | Yuri Zhadobin | 
| Ambassador of the Republic of Belarus to the Republic of Armenia | |
| In office 14 August 2008 – 25 June 2015 | |
| President | Alexander Lukashenko | 
| Prime Minister | Sergei Sidorsky Mikhail Myasnikovich Andrei Kobyakov | 
| Preceded by | Marina Dolgopolova | 
| Succeeded by | Igor Nazaruk | 
| Personal details | |
| Born | 27 January 1957 Zdudichi, Svyetlahorsk district, Byelorussian SSR, Soviet Union (now Belarus) | 
| Alma mater | Belarusian State Technological University | 
| Occupation | Politician Policeman | 
| Military career | |
| Rank | Major general | 
Stepan Nikolaevich Sukhorenko (also transliterated as Stiapan Sukharenko; Belarusian: Сцяпа́н Мікала́евіч Сухарэ́нка; born 27 January 1957) is a Belarusian politician and security official. He previously served as Chairman of State Security Committee of the Republic of Belarus (KGB) from 2005 to 2007 and as Ambassador of the Republic of Belarus to the Republic of Armenia from 2008 to 2015.
Born in Zdudichi, Sukhorenko first worked as a foreman then deputy head of the workshop of the Minsk Plant of the Минскстройматериалы (Minsk Construction Materials). In 1984 he entered the KGB of the BSSR, continuing to work there until the fall of the Soviet Union when he joined the Belarusian KGB. In 2000 he became First Deputy Chairman of the KGB, before becoming chairman in 2005.His time as chairman was heavily overshadowed by the 2006 Belarusian presidential election and subsequent Jeans Revolution. Over the course of calls for protests, he stated that the Belarusian opposition had trained militants in Georgia, and that they planned to do a false flag and take over in a coup. He became known for a conference in which he showed evidence of a Georgian militant, who said they were planning to poison the water supply with dead rats, which became a meme and famous. After being dismissed in 2007, he became the Ambassador to Armenia in 2008. His time there was marked by a response to Azerbaijan's and Armenia's worsening relations, where he attempted to be neutral. Since then, his activity has been unknown.