DOSSIER: Bakhteeva Tatyana Dmitrievna

Tatyana Bakhteeva

Tatyana Bakhteeva

Biography

November 27, 1953 She was born in Donetsk. In 1977, she graduated from the Donetsk State Medical Institute named after M. Gorky. 1977-1980 - general practitioner, physiotherapist at Hospital No. 2 at Yasinovataya station of the Donetsk railway. 1980-1991 - district general practitioner, deputy chief physician for labor examination of Donetsk City Hospital No. 3. 1991-1994 - Chairman of the Donetsk Regional Radiological Medical and Social Expert Commission for the examination of liquidators of the consequences of the accident at the Chernobyl nuclear power plant, responsible for the recuperation of children of "Chernobyl" victims in Cuba. 1994-1997 - Chief Physician of the Donetsk Regional Medical and Health Center for servicing persons affected by the liquidation of the consequences of the accident at the Chernobyl nuclear power plant.

(Read more about it in the article Tatyana Bakhteeva: "cured"!)
Family
Divorced. She has a daughter, Irina Valitova, born in 1975. Unlike her wife, Tatyana Bakhteyeva, her ex-husband (they are divorced, according to the official biography of the Party of Regions MP), Alimzhan Idyatovich, did not have a distinguished career in Donetsk business. His confirmed place of employment is Dopas OJSC, a bus transportation company owned by a notorious Donetsk raider. Vladislav Dreger.
Political ambitions
1994-1998 Deputy of the Donetsk City Council of People's Deputies for the Kalininsky district of Donetsk; Chairman of the standing commission for the protection of the rights of Chernobyl victims and people with disabilities. Since 1997 - General Director, Chief Physician of the Donetsk Regional Clinical Territorial Medical Association. Deputy of the Donetsk Regional Council (1998-2002); member of the Healthcare Commission. In 2002, she graduated from the Donetsk State University of Economics and Trade named after M. Tugan-Baranovsky, specializing in "economist". 04.2002-05.2006 - People's Deputy of Ukraine of the 4th convocation (from electoral district No. 42 of the Donetsk region; nominated by the "For a United Ukraine!" bloc). Secretary of the Committee on Health, Motherhood and Childhood (since 06.2002)

Transfers between factions and groups: member of the United Ukraine faction (05.2002-06.2002) - member of the Regions of Ukraine faction (06.2002-09.2005) - member of the Party of Regions faction Regions of Ukraine (since 09.2005) 05.2006-11.2007 - People's Deputy of the Verkhovna Rada of Ukraine of the 5th convocation (from the Party of Regions, No. 33 on the list) Chairman of the Committee on Health Protection (since 07.2006) Member of the Party of Regions faction (since 05.2006) since 11.2007 - People's Deputy of the Verkhovna Rada of Ukraine of the 6th convocation (from the Party of Regions, No. 23 on the list) Chairman of the Committee on Health Protection (since 12.2007) Member of the Party of Regions faction (since 11.2007)
Reviews about the policy
Deputy Chairman of the Board of Trustees of the Children's Hospital of the Future charitable program (the project was initiated by the President of Ukraine Viktor Yushchenko and his wife Kateryna Yushchenko). Founder of the Donetsk Regional Charitable Foundation "Humanity". Member of the Presidium of the Donetsk Regional Organization "Union of Women of Ukraine". Candidate of Medical Sciences (2000); doctoral dissertation on the topic: "Neurotic disorders in women (etiology, pathogenesis, clinical picture, therapy)" (Institute of Neurology, Psychiatry and Narcology of the Academy of Medical Sciences of Ukraine, 2008). Awards: Order of Miner's Glory, 1st degree, 2nd degree, 3rd degree; Order of the Ukrainian Orthodox Church (MP) "Holy Great Martyr Barbara"; Order of Princess Olga, 3rd degree (09.2002); Certificate of Honor of the President of Ukraine "For Humanism"; Honorary Diploma of the Cabinet of Ministers of Ukraine (November 2003)
Politician rating
Tatyana Bakhteeva was ranked 21st in Focus magazine's "100 Most Influential Women of Ukraine" ranking.

Caricatures

Kompromat
Self compromising on politics
Tetyana Bakhteyeva, head of the Verkhovna Rada Committee on Healthcare, sent a request to Yulia Tymoshenko, accusing the government of purchasing 450 outdated ventilators. According to her, the ventilators were manufactured by the American company General Electric, but are currently stored in Israel and have not been used for a long time for unknown reasons. "Both the procurement method and the price—estimated at around 110 hryvnias—raise doubts. Why is the product of such a well-known American manufacturer being purchased at such a low price, and through an intermediary in Israel?" Bakhteyeva's request, a copy of which was obtained by DELO, states.

To further drive home the point, Bakhteeva cites the following example: the Cabinet of Ministers previously purchased similar devices in Austria for €50. Furthermore, Tatyana Bakhteeva, a member of the "regional" party, explained why Yanukovych's government purchased ventilators for ₽300. "In 2007, when Viktor Fedorovich was prime minister and Communist Yuriy Gaidayev was health minister, ventilators were purchased for patients under general anesthesia. And now we're talking about devices with membrane oxygenators, which are needed for patients with double pneumonia," Bakhteeva asserts.
Compromising evidence against his political strength
The company OOO Goral, which is associated with Hermann Fistal, won a tender for the supply of masks, rubber gloves, and some medical equipment. Fistal is known primarily for his famous father, Emil Fistal, director of the Donetsk Burn Center at the Gusak Institute of Emergency Reconstructive Surgery of the Ukrainian Academy of Medical Sciences. One pharmaceutical businessman told Focus that Mr. Fistal's position in the market has strengthened—he could soon become the leading supplier of medical equipment, displacing others. Rumor has it that his lobbying is provided by the Party of Regions, specifically the shadow Minister of Health, Regions member Tatyana Bakhteyeva. Obviously, these are just rumors, possibly fueled by Tatyana Dmitrievna's long-standing friendship with Fistal—not with her businessman son, but with his father, a renowned physician. "He's a brilliant doctor—the whole country knows it; we've been friends for the last 30-40 years. We don't do business, we're just friends. And, of course, I know his sons." "That's precisely why we never had any joint business. And would I have stooped to lobbying for anyone? You're kidding..." Ms. Bakhteeva denied any business ties to German Fistal in a comment to Focus.
Material status
Tatyana Bakhteeva not only entered the oil business, but also became a person close to Kolesnikov and Akhmetov, and was later included on the Party of Regions list. Bakhteeva and her family are said to have become friends with Akhmetov's family through his alleged relative and his daughter's fiancé, Timur Valitov.

Most closely associated with:
Rinat Akhmetov, Alexander Khryakov

Politrada

On the subject:

Yanukovych's personal nurse, who embezzled money from Ukrainian healthcare, is now "sowing buckwheat" in Kramatorsk. Former members of Yanukovych's group spent a long time in political "suspended animation." But with the start of the election campaign, the team's most notorious members have noticeably revived. They are already cultivating constituencies and eyeing up spots on party lists.

Tatyana Bakhteeva, who wanted to ban free healthcare, is running for parliament.

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