Pavlo Meshyk

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Pavlo Meshyk
Павло Мешик
Minister of Interior of UkrSSR
In office
16 March 1953 – 30 June 1953
Preceded byTimofei Strokach
Succeeded byTimofei Strokach
People's Commissar of State Security of UkrSSR
In office
26 February 1941[1] – 31 July 1941
Preceded byChief of Main Directorate of State Security of UkrSSR
Succeeded byChief of Main Directorate of State Security of UkrSSR
Personal details
Born1910
Russian SFSR
NationalityUkrainian
Political partyCommunist Party of Ukraine
Military service
Allegiance Soviet Union
Branch/serviceNKVD
RankLieutenant General

Pavlo Yakovych Meshyk (Ukrainian: Павло Якович Мешик; Russian: Павел Яковлевич Мешик, Pavel Meshyk; 1910 – 23 December 1953) was a Ukrainian Soviet security operative and NKVD officer.

Biography

Meshyk was born in a family of clerks in

OGPU
.

After finishing the OGPU College (1932–1933), Meshyk worked in the central office of OGPU–NKVD in

Vneshtorg, trade offices
) of the GUGB Department 3 (counterintelligence), 1935–1937).

this is the List of leadership positions Meshyk held afterwards:

Upon his return from Poland, Meshyk worked for the Soviet atomic bomb project:[1]

  • 1945–1953 assistant chief of the First Main Directorate (Sovnarkom – Sovmin of USSR)
  • 1953 Minister of Internal Affairs of the UkrSSR (on initiative of Lavrentiy Beria)[1]

On 30 June 1953 Meshyk was arrested in

Kiev.[1] On 23 December 1953 he was sentenced by the Special court presence (Russian: Специальное судебное присутствие, Spetsialnoye sudebnoye prisutstvie) of the Supreme Court of USSR to "VMN" (i.e. capital punishment) on the "case of Beria's gang". Meshyk was executed by shooting. He was stripped of all awards and titles.[1] Meshyk was partially rehabilitated when on 29 May 2000 the Military Collegium of the Supreme Court of the Russian Federation requalified corpus delicti
(body of the crime) to "Excess of power and abuse of office that led to severe consequences", execution by shooting changed to 25 years of imprisonment without confiscation of personal property.

Awards

References

  1. ^ a b c d e f g h i Vronska, T. (МЕШИК Павло Якович). Encyclopedia of History of Ukraine

External links