- Markos Kyprianou
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Markos Kyprianou
Μάρκος ΚυπριανούMinister of Foreign Affairs In office
3 March 2008 – 19 July 2011President Dimitris Christofias Preceded by Erato Kozakou-Marcoullis European Commissioner for Health In office
1 January 2007 – 3 March 2008President José Manuel Barroso Preceded by Himself (Health and Consumer Protection) Succeeded by Androulla Vassiliou European Commissioner for Health and Consumer Protection In office
22 November 2004 – 1 January 2007President José Manuel Barroso Preceded by Pavel Telička Succeeded by Himself (Health)
Meglena Kuneva (Consumer Protection)European Commissioner for the Budget In office
1 May 2004 – 22 November 2004
Serving with Michaele SchreyerPresident Romano Prodi Preceded by Michaele Schreyer Succeeded by Dalia Grybauskaitė (Financial Programming and the Budget) Personal details Born 22 January 1960
Limassol, CyprusPolitical party Democratic Party Alma mater National and Kapodistrian University of Athens
Trinity College, Cambridge
Harvard Law SchoolProfession Lawyer Religion Church of Cyprus Márkos Kyprianoú (Greek: Μάρκος Κυπριανού, pronounced [ˈmarkos cipriaˈnu]) (born 22 January 1960 in Limassol) is a Cypriot politician who served as a Minister of Foreign Affairs until his official resignation in July 19 2011, following the events of the Evangelos Florakis Naval Base explosion. A member of the Democratic Party, he was formerly Cyprus's Finance Minister and the European Commissioner for Health. He tendered his resignation as Commissioner on 29 February 2008 to become Foreign Minister in the government of newly-elected President Dimitris Christofias; the resignation took effect on 3 March 2008, when his successor, Androulla Vassiliou, was confirmed as Commissioner.[1][2][3]
He studied Law at the Law School of the University of Athens and at Trinity College, Cambridge, where he specialised in International Law and Tax Law and was awarded a Master’s degree in Law (LLM). He earned a second Master’s degree in Law, specialising in Company Law and Taxation, at Harvard Law School. He continued his academic career as a trainee at the Human Rights Commission of the Council of Europe and by carrying out research in International Law at the University of Cambridge.
He is the younger son of Spyros Kyprianou, who was President of Cyprus from 1977 to 1988.
As a Commissioner, one of his policies was the promotion of warnings on tobacco packets, with the Commission moving towards pictorial warnings.[4] Following several European Union member states enacting bans on smoking in public places Kyprianou proposed a plan for an EU-wide ban of that kind.[5] In May 2007, Kyprianou released a paper to tackle the shortage of organ donation in the Union. The plan included promotion, specially trained medical staff and an EU wide organ donor card.[6]
Contents
Professional C.V.
- since 1985 practising law
- 1985-1991 associate with the law firm of Antis Triantafyllides & Sons
- 1991–1995 partner with the law firm of Kyprianou & Boyiadjis
- 1995– 2003 partner with the law firm of George L. Savvides & Co (merged with Kyprianou & Boyiadjis)
Political C.V.
- 1986–1991 Municipal Councillor for the City of Nicosia
- 1993–1997 President of the Youth Organisation of the Democratic Party
- since 1986 Member of the Central Committee of the Democratic Party (DIKO)
- since 1990 Member of the Political Committee of the Party
- 1993–1998 and 2001 Member of the Executive Bureau of the Party
- 1991–2003 Member of the House of Representatives for the Nicosia District
- 1999–2003 Chairman of the House Committee on Financial and Budgetary Affairs
- 1 March 2003 – 30 April 2004 Minister of Finance
- since 1 May 2004 Member of the European Commission, since November 2004 responsible for Health and Consumer Protection
Memberships
- American Bar Association (associate member)
- Harvard Law School Association of Europe
- International Bar Association
- Cyprus Red Cross Society
References
- ^ EU Health Commissioner resigns to head Cyprus Foreign Ministry – People's Daily Online
- ^ EU confirms Androulla Vassiliou is nominee for new Cypriot commissioner – News – MSNBC.com
- ^ http://www.consilium.europa.eu/ueDocs/cms_Data/docs/pressData/en/misc/99150.pdf
- ^ Commissioner Kyprianou urges EU governments to use pictorial warnings on tobacco packets ec.europa.eu
- ^ Commission wants EU-wide smoking ban in public places euractiv.com 30/01/07
- ^ Brussels to push for EU-wide organ donor card euobserver.com 20/05/07
External links
Political offices New office Cypriot European Commissioner
2004–2008Succeeded by
Androulla VassiliouPreceded by
Michaele SchreyerEuropean Commissioner for the Budget
2004
Served alongside: Michaele SchreyerSucceeded by
Dalia Grybauskaitė
as European Commissioner for Financial Programming and the BudgetPreceded by
David Byrne
Pavel TeličkaEuropean Commissioner for Health and Consumer Protection
2004–2007Succeeded by
Himself
as European Commissioner for HealthSucceeded by
Meglena Kuneva
as European Commissioner for Consumer ProtectionPreceded by
Himself
as European Commissioner for Health and Consumer ProtectionEuropean Commissioner for Health
2007–2008Succeeded by
Androulla VasiliouPreceded by
Erato Kozakou-MarcoullisMinister of Foreign Affairs
2008–presentIncumbent Barroso Commission I (2004–2009) Joaquín Almunia · Catherine Ashton6 · José Manuel Barroso1 · Jacques Barrot2 · Joe Borg · Karel De Gucht9 · Stavros Dimas · Benita Ferrero-Waldner · Ján Figeľ10 · Franco Frattini2, 5 · Mariann Fischer Boel · Dalia Grybauskaitė7 · Danuta Hübner8 · Siim Kallas2 · László Kovács · Neelie Kroes · Meglena Kuneva3 · Markos Kyprianou4 · Peter Mandelson6 · Charlie McCreevy · Louis Michel9 · Leonard Orban3 · Andris Piebalgs · Janez Potočnik · Viviane Reding · Olli Rehn · Paweł Samecki8 · Maroš Šefčovič10 · Algirdas Šemeta7 · Vladimír Špidla · Antonio Tajani2, 5 · Androulla Vassiliou4 · Günter Verheugen2 · Margot Wallström21 = President. 2 = Vice President. 3 = Served from 1 January 2007. 4 = Vassiliou replaced Kyprianou on 3 March 2008. 5 = Tajani replaced Frattini on 18 June 2008. 6 = Ashton replaced Mandelson on 3 October 2008. 7 = Šemeta replaced Grybauskaitė on 1 July 2009. 8 = Samecki replaced Hübner on 4 July 2009. 9 = De Gucht replaced Michel on 17 July 2009. 10 = Šefčovič replaced Figeľ on 1 October 2009. Categories:- 1960 births
- Alumni of Trinity College, Cambridge
- Cypriot European Commissioners
- Cypriot lawyers
- Cyprus Ministers of Finance
- Cyprus Ministers of Foreign Affairs
- Greek Cypriot people
- Harvard Law School alumni
- Living people
- People from Limassol
- National and Kapodistrian University of Athens alumni
- Democratic Party (Cyprus) politicians
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