Dumitru Braghiș

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Dumitru Braghiș
Braghiș in 2023
Moldovan Ambassador to China and Vietnam
Assumed office
17 June 2020
PresidentIgor Dodon
Maia Sandu
Prime MinisterIon Chicu
Aureliu Ciocoi (acting)
Natalia Gavrilița
Dorin Recean
Preceded byDenis Jelimalai
Moldovan Ambassador to Russia, Kazakhstan and Kyrgyzstan
In office
28 October 2015 – 3 March 2017
PresidentNicolae Timofti
Igor Dodon
Prime MinisterValeriu Streleț
Gheorghe Brega (acting)
Pavel Filip
Preceded byAndrei Galbur
Succeeded byAndrei Neguța
Member of the Moldovan Parliament
In office
20 March 2001 – 22 April 2009
Parliamentary groupBraghiș Alliance
Our Moldova Alliance
Democratic Moldova Electoral Bloc
Social Democratic Party
5th Prime Minister of Moldova
In office
21 December 1999 – 19 April 2001
PresidentPetru Lucinschi
Vladimir Voronin
Deputy
Preceded byIon Sturza
Succeeded byVasile Tarlev
First Deputy Minister of Economy and Reforms
In office
9 July 1998 – 21 December 1999
PresidentPetru Lucinschi
Prime MinisterIon Ciubuc
Ion Sturza
MinisterIon Sturza
Alexandru Muravschi
Deputy Minister of Economy and Reforms
In office
11 February 1997 – 9 July 1998
PresidentPetru Lucinschi
Prime MinisterIon Ciubuc
MinisterIon Guțu
Ion Sturza
Personal details
Born (1957-12-28) 28 December 1957 (age 66)
Grătiești, Moldavian SSR, Soviet Union
Political partySocial Democratic Party (Moldova)
Other political
affiliations
Party Alliance Our Moldova
Alma materTechnical University of Moldova

Dumitru Braghiș (pronunciation: [ˈbraɡiʃ]; born 28 December 1957) is a Moldovan politician, diplomat and economist. He is the current Moldovan Ambassador to China and Vietnam, appointed in mid-2020.[1][2] He was the Prime Minister of Moldova from 1999 until 2001. Then, he was a member of the Parliament of Moldova, where he represented the Party Alliance Our Moldova. He was chairman of the Party of Social Democracy and deputy in the Parliament of the Republic of Moldova (2005–2009).

Biography[edit]

Dumitru Braghiș was born on December 28, 1957, in the village of Grătieşti, Chișinău municipality, in a family of peasants. In 1975, he finished a secondary school no. 1 in Chişinău and in 1980 he graduated Technical University, specialising in power engineering, working as an engineer-constructor at the Tractor's Factory. He has Ph.D. in Economics. Through 1981 to 1992 he held various eligible positions in the Komsomol. In 1987 through 1988 he was an instructor in Central Committee of Communist Party of Moldova. Braghiș was elected as deputy in the Supreme Soviet of the Soviet Union in 1989 through 1991. Through 1992–1995 Braghiș became the General Deputy Director of "Moldova EXIM" Association. Through 1995–1997 Braghiș was the General Director of the Department for Foreign Economic relations of the Ministry of Finance.

In 1997, through 1999, Braghiș was the Deputy Minister of Economy and Reforms. Braghiș became the Prime Minister of Moldova in 1999 through April 2001. Since 2001 Braghiș has been a deputy in Parliament of the Republic of Moldova. In the 2005 parliamentary elections, he was elected as a deputy in the lists of the Electoral Bloc Democratic Moldova, becoming chairman of this party. In July 2005, he was an independent candidate for the Chisinau City Mayor's General Election, gaining 20.65% of the votes. Since 2006, he has served as the chairman of the Social Democratic Party. He has also run for election on June 3, 2007, from the Party of Social Democracy of Moldova (PSDM). After the expiration of his mandate of deputy in 2009, until 2013 he worked in the private sector. On 27 November 2015, he became the Extraordinary and Plenipotentiary Ambassador of the Republic of Moldova to the Russian Federation.[3][4] He was dismissed from this role in early 2017.

Dumitru Braghis speaks English, French and Russian. He is married and has a child.

See also[edit]

References[edit]

  1. ^ "Președintele țării a semnat Decretele cu privire la numirea Ambasadorilor Republicii Moldova în China și Estonia".
  2. ^ Davidov Daniela. "Dumitru Braghiș, numit de Guvern în funcția de ambasador prin cumul în Republica Socialistă Vietnam" (in Romanian). Cotidianul.md. Archived from the original on 2021-10-20. Retrieved 2021-05-26.
  3. ^ "Ambasadorul Republicii Moldova în Federația Rusă". Archived from the original on 2019-02-28. Retrieved 2019-02-27.
  4. ^ Decretul Președintelui Republicii Moldova nr. 1836-VII din 27 noiembrie 2015

https://china.mfa.gov.md/ro/content/ambasador

External links[edit]

Political offices
Preceded by Prime Minister of Moldova
1999-2001
Succeeded by