Viacheslav Chornovil
Viacheslav Chornovil | |
|---|---|
| В'ячеслав Чорновіл | |
Chornovil in 1998 | |
| People's Deputy of Ukraine | |
| In office 15 May 1990 – 26 March 1999 | |
| Preceded by |
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| Succeeded by |
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| Constituency |
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| Chairman of the Lviv Oblast Council | |
| In office April 1990 – April 1992 | |
| Preceded by | Position established |
| Succeeded by | Mykola Horyn |
| Personal details | |
| Born | 24 December 1937 Yerky, Ukrainian SSR, Soviet Union |
| Died | 25 March 1999 (aged 61) Near Boryspil, Ukraine |
| Cause of death | Traffic collision |
| Political party | People's Movement of Ukraine (from 1989) |
| Other political affiliations | Komsomol (c. late 1950s–1966) |
| Spouses | Iryna Brunevets
(m. 1960; div. 1962) |
| Children | |
| Alma mater | Taras Shevchenko National University of Kyiv |
| Awards | |
| Signature | |
Viacheslav Maksymovych Chornovil (Ukrainian: В'ячеслав Максимович Чорновіл; 24 December 1937 – 25 March 1999) was a Ukrainian Soviet dissident, independence activist and politician who was the leader of the People's Movement of Ukraine from 1989 until his death in 1999. He spent fifteen years imprisoned by the Soviet government for his human rights activism, and was later a People's Deputy of Ukraine from 1990 to 1999, being among the first and most prominent anti-communists to hold public office in Ukraine. He twice ran for the presidency of Ukraine; the first time, in 1991, he was defeated by Leonid Kravchuk, while in 1999 he died in a car crash under disputed circumstances.
Chornovil was born in the village of Yerky, in central Ukraine, then under the Soviet Union. A member of the Komsomol from his time in university, he was affiliated with the counter-cultural Sixtier movement, and was removed from the Komsomol after speaking out against communism. His samvydav, which investigated violations of intellectuals arrested during a 1965–1966 Soviet crackdown, earned him Western acclaim, as well as a three-year prison sentence in Yakutia. Upon his release he returned to samvydav and began publishing The Ukrainian Herald, a predecessor to the modern Ukrainian independent press. He was again arrested in another purge of intellectuals in January 1972 and sentenced to between six and twelve years in prison.
Chornovil was described by fellow dissident Mikhail Kheifets as "general of the zeks" for his leadership of Ukrainian political prisoners, and recognised as a prisoner of conscience by Amnesty International. He was allowed to return to Ukraine in 1985 as part of perestroika. Throughout the late 1980s he was active in organising a movement in opposition to Soviet rule over Ukraine. The movement later resulted in a popular revolution that toppled communism and led to Chornovil taking office as a member of Ukraine's parliament. He was one of the two main candidates in the 1991 Ukrainian presidential election, though he was defeated by former communist leader Leonid Kravchuk, and he actively promoted Ukrainian membership in the European Union and opposition to the emergence of the Ukrainian oligarchs.
Chornovil was a controversial figure in his lifetime, and the last months of his life were dominated by a split in his party, the People's Movement of Ukraine. His death in a car crash during the 1999 Ukrainian presidential election, during which he was a candidate in opposition to incumbent president Leonid Kuchma, has led to conspiracy theories and several years of investigations and trials, which have neither confirmed nor eliminated assassination as a possibility. He is a popular figure in present-day Ukraine, where he has twice been placed among the top ten most popular Ukrainians and is a symbol of the country's democracy and human rights activism as well as Pro-Europeanism.