Aleksandr Bujko


Aleksandr Mikhailovich Bujko (Russian: Alexandr Michalievich Bukko, born on April 7, 1885 in the village of Ostrowiany in the Vilnius province, died on January 30, 1941 in Moscow) - a Bolshevik activist, a Soviet politician. Curriculum vitae

He studied at the evening technical school at Putran's Factory in St. Petersburg, in 1904 he joined the SDPRR, on March 1, 1909 he was arrested and on November 22, 1909, he was sentenced to settle in Ust-Urdu in the Irkutsk Governorate. Until 1917 he stayed in Czeremchów, Tułuno, Krasnoyarsk and Vierchniedinsk (now Ulan Ude), in 1917 he was the deputy chairman of the Verkhnennes Council, and in 1917-1918 he was head of the town of Wierchnieudińska. In 1918, he chaired the Nadbajkala Revolutionary Tribunal, after taking the Baikal area by whites, he emigrated to Urgi (now Ulaanbaatar), then to Harbin, 1920 after he was taken over by the Reds, he returned to Russia. From October 1920 to 1921 he was an emissary of the authorities of the Far East Republic in the Nadbork region, from June 1921 to May 1924 a member of the Far-Eastern Central Committee of the Central Committee of the RCP (b), including from June to 18 September 1922 the secretary responsible for the Far-Eastern Central Office of the Central Committee of the ROC (b) and up to 15 November 1922 chairman of the People's Assembly of the Far East. From September 1922 to May 1924 he was the deputy secretary of the responsible Far Eastern Bureau of the Central Committee of the RCP (b), from 1922 chairman of the Far Eastern Council of Food Co-operatives Societies, from June 1924 to 1925 member of the Board of the Central Council of Food Associations of the USSR. In the years 1925-1933 he was the deputy of the People's Commissar for Internal Trade / People's Commissar of Commerce of the RSFSR, and from 1933 until the end of his life the deputy of the main arbitrator at the Council of People's Commissars of the RFSRR. Bibliography

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