Yakiv Apter

Yakiv Mikhailovich Apter (November 30, 1940, Gorky – November 18, 1993, Bilohlynka) was a Ukrainian politician and the member of the Verkhovna Rada of the 1st convocation from May 15, 1990, to November 1993.[1][2]

Yakiv Apter
Member of Verkhovna Rada of the 1st Convocation
In office
1990–1993
Personal details
Born(1940-11-30)November 30, 1940
Gorky
DiedNovember 18, 1993(1993-11-18) (aged 52)
Bilohlynka
OccupationPolitician

Biography

Yakiv Apter was born on November 30, 1940, in Gorky, Russian SFSR, into a Jewish family. At the age of four, he became an orphan and was raised in orphanages. In 1956, Yakiv Apter started his career as a locksmith and worked as a locksmith at the 8th State Bearing Plant in Kharkiv. In 1959, he began his military service and later returned to work as a locksmith at the same plant. From 1963 to 1968, Yakiv Apter studied at the Gorky Institute of Water Transport Engineers, specializing in shipbuilding. For the next five years, he worked in his field at the Kerch Shipbuilding Plant named after B.E. Butoma.

In 1973, Yakiv Apter became the deputy head of the production and dispatch department of the Kerch Ship Repair Plant, and in 1975, he became the deputy head of the Kerch Metallurgical Plant named after V. Volkov. He remained with this enterprise, initially becoming the head of the production department, and director in 1987.[1]

Before the elections to the Verkhovna Rada of the Ukrainian SSR in March 1990, the labor collective of the Kerch Metallurgical Plant nominated Yakiv Apter as a candidate for the position of People's Deputy of Ukraine in the Crimean electoral district #246 . In the second round, held on March 18, Yakiv Apter received 74.92% of the voters' support and thus obtained a deputy's mandate.[1]

In the Verkhovna Rada, Yakiv Apter was part of the Industrialists group and worked in the Committee on Economic Reform and Management of the National Economy.[3] He also actively participated in Crimean politics.[4]

On November 18, 1993, Yakiv Apter was traveling in a "Volga" car from Simferopol Airport to Simferopol. Near the village of Bilohlynka, the car was involved in a car accident, and Yakiv Apter, along with the driver and four people, died. On November 23, he was buried in Kerch.[5][6]

References

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