Oleksandr Slobodian

Oleksandr Vyacheslavovych Slobodian
Native name Олександр В'ячеславович Слободян
Born (1956-02-21) February 21, 1956
Ternopil
Residence Kiev
Alma mater Kiev Food Technology Institute
Occupation engineer, manager
Known for Founder and chair of the Obolon CJSC, FC Obolon
Home town Krasyliv
Political party Ukrainian People's Party
Board member of Obolon CJSC
Partner(s) Married[1]
Children 3[1]

Oleksandr Vyacheslavovych Slobodian (Ukrainian: Олександр В'ячеславович Слободян: born February 21, 1956 in Ternopil, Ukraine[2]) is a Ukrainian millionaire businessman and politician. He is the original CEO and current honorary president of the Kiev-based Obolon CJSC, Europe's largest brewing company, and the president of the Ukrainian Premier League football club Obolon Kyiv (both since 1998).[1]

Biography

Slobodian graduated from the Kiev Technological Institute of Food Science in 1978.[1] Since 1980 he works for Obolon CJSC.[1] In 1989, he became CEO and in 1993 the head of the board of Obolon.[1] In 1998, he landed th posts President of CJSC Obolon and President of FC Obolon Kyiv.[1]

Slobodian was also a long-time member of parliament in the Verkhovna Rada (from 1998 till December 2012), representing the Our Ukraine Bloc & Our Ukraine–People's Self-Defense Bloc as a member of Ukrainian People's Party from 2002 till December 2012.[2][3] Slobodian is a member of the Ukrainian People's Party since 1997.[2] Since 1999 he is deputy head of the party.[2] In the 2012 parliamentary election Slobodian unsuccessfully tried to get (re)-elected into parliament by falling to win a single-member districts (number 187) (first-past-the-post wins a parliament seat) located in Khmelnytskyi as an independent candidate.[4][5] He was runner-up in the district with 28.26% of the votes.[6]

On 21 February 2013 FC Obolon Kyiv (which he was the president of) withdrew voluntarily from the Ukrainian First League after Slobodyan had refused to finance the club after goalkeeper Kostyantyn Makhnovskyi was sold by the club without his consent.[7][8] In December 2012 Slobodian announced he would create a new team under the moniker "Obolon Brovar".[9]

Slobodian did not participate in the 2014 Ukrainian parliamentary election.[10]

References

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