Heidi Tagliavini

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Heidi Tagliavini

Heidi Tagliavini (born 1950) is a Swiss former

war in Donbass
.

Life

Tagliavini was born in 1950 in Basel.[3]

Career

After joining the Swiss diplomatic service in 1982, Tagliavini served in the Directorate of Political Affairs of the Federal Department of Foreign Affairs and was posted to The Hague. She was a member of the first Organization for Security and Co-operation in Europe (OSCE) Assistance Group to Chechnya in 1995.[4]

In 1996, Tagliavini served as Minister and Deputy Head of Mission of the Swiss embassy in Moscow. From 1998 to 1999, she was the Deputy Head of the United Nations Observer Mission in Georgia (Unomig). Returning to Switzerland in 1999, she was appointed head of Human Rights and Humanitarian Policy in the Department of Foreign Affairs.[4]

After a stint as Personal Representative of the OSCE Chairperson-in-Office for the Caucasus from 2000 to 2001, Tagliavini served as Swiss Ambassador to Bosnia and Herzegovina from 2001 to 2002,[4] and was asked by UN Secretary-General Kofi Annan to head UNOMIG in 2002.[1] She served in that position until 2006, when she returned to Bern to assume the position of deputy head of the Directorate of Political Affairs in the Department of Foreign Affairs.[5]

In November 2008, the Swiss government agreed to the

EU presidency's request to have Tagliavini lead the EU investigation into the chain of events leading to the 2008 Russo-Georgian War in Abkhazia and South Ossetia.[2] The independent international fact-finding mission headed by Tagliavini was given a budget of €1.6 million. Its report was published on 30 September 2009. The final report, published on September 30, concluded that Georgia had started the war, but that both sides were responsible for the escalation of the conflict.[6]

Role in the Ukraine crisis

Tagliavini was until June 2015[7] a member of the Trilateral Contact Group on Ukraine, which was organized to attempt a diplomatic resolution to the conflict.[8] The other members of the council were former President Leonid Kuchma of Ukraine, and Russia's ambassador to Ukraine, Mikhail Zurabov.[9]

In late 2009 and early 2010, Tagliavini led the

Minsk II
agreement.

In July 2014, when Malaysia Airlines Flight 17 was shot down over rebel-held territory in Ukraine, Tagliavini negotiated a deal between Ukraine and the separatists to allow international investigators into the area to collect remains and wreckage.[8]

In February 2015, Tagliavini was among the signatories of the

Minsk II agreement, alongside Ukraine's Leonid Kuchma, Russia's Mikhail Zurabov as well as Alexander Zakharchenko and Igor Plotnitsky representing the rebels in east Ukraine.[11]

Later in 2015, Tagliavini resigned from the Swiss diplomatic service.[12]

Publications

Tagliavini co-published a book, The Caucasus - Defence of the Future (2001),[13] in which she recounts her Chechnya experiences. An amateur photographer, she is also the author of Zeichen der Zerstörung,[14] a book featuring her photographs of war-torn Chechnya.[15]

References