Anna Tsivilyova
Russian deputy minister of defense From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
Anna Evgenievna Tsivilyova (Russian: Анна Евгеньевна Цивилёва, née Putina [Путина]; born 9 May 1972) is a Russian government official. She is a first cousin once removed of president Vladimir Putin.
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Anna Tsivilyova | |
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Анна Цивилёва | |
![]() Tsivilyova in 2024 | |
Deputy Minister of Defence | |
Assumed office 14 June 2024 | |
Prime Minister | Mikhail Mishustin |
Personal details | |
Born | Anna Evgenievna Putina 9 May 1972 Ivanovo, RSFSR, USSR |
Spouse | Sergey Tsivilyov |
Children | 2 |
Alma mater | RUDN, RANEPA |
In 2023, Putin made her chairperson of a state fund for veterans of the Russian invasion of Ukraine. The following year, she was appointed deputy minister of defense.
Biography
Summarize
Perspective
She was born on 9 May 1972 in Ivanovo to a family of surgeons. Her father was Yevgeny Mikhailovich Putin (1933–2024), a urologist and cousin of Vladimir Putin. She graduated from the Ivanovo State Medical Academy with a degree in psychiatry. From 1996, she worked as a psychiatrist at the Bogorodskoye Psychiatric Hospital in Ivanovo.[1][2][3][4]
After Vladimir Putin became president, she moved to Moscow and began supplying medical equipment, working as a manager at the state-owned Medtekhsnab, and then at the private company Digimed.[2][3] Before 2023, Tsivilyova had no known military background or relationship to defence matters.[5]
On 3 April 2023, Putin appointed her chairperson of the newly-created State Fund for the Support of Participants in the Special Military Operation "Defenders of the Fatherland".[6][7]
On 17 June 2024, she was made a deputy minister of defence.[8][9][10] This appointment reportedly drew muted criticism within the Russian press for nepotism that "tested even Russian tolerance for corrupt practice", according to the British Ministry of Defence[5][11] On 17 August 2024, the British Ministry of Defence reported that Tsivilyova had been promoted to the position of State Secretary of the Ministry of Defence, while still maintaining her role as Deputy Defence Minister. In this new role, she is primarily responsible for the ministry's relationship with the Russian legislature and other government bodies.[5][11]
Personal life
Tsivileva is married to Sergey Tsivilyov, a Russian energy minister and former governor of Kemerovo Oblast.[2]
Sanctions
In 2022, following the Russian invasion of Ukraine, Tsivilyova and her coal mining corporation, JSC Kolmar Group, were placed on the United Kingdom sanctions list for having "significantly benefitted" from their relationship with Putin.[12][13] The following year, Tsivilyova and the "Defenders of the Fatherland" foundation were sanctioned by the European Union.[14]
References
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