Yakov Malik
Yakov Malik by Arthur Sasse, 1952
Permanent Representative of the Soviet Union to the United Nations
In office
1968  November 1976
PresidentLeonid Brezhnev[lower-alpha 1]
Secretary-GeneralKurt Waldheim
Preceded byNikolai Fedorenko
Succeeded byOleg Troyanovsky
In office
May 1948  October 1952
PresidentJoseph Stalin[lower-alpha 1]
Secretary-GeneralTrygve Lie
Preceded byAndrey Gromyko
Succeeded byValerian Zorin
Personal details
Born
Yakov Alexandrovich Malik

(1906-12-06)6 December 1906
Zmiiv, Kharkov Governorate, Russian Empire[lower-alpha 2]
Died11 February 1980(1980-02-11) (aged 73)
Moscow, Russian SFSR, Soviet Union
Political partyCommunist Party of the Soviet Union (1930–1980)
Alma materNational University of Kharkiv
ProfessionDiplomat
Awards
Yakov Malik in 1970

Yakov Aleksandrovich Malik (Russian: Яков Александрович Малик; 19 December [O.S. 6 December] 1906  11 February 1980) was a Soviet diplomat.

Biography

Born in Ostroverkhivka village, Kharkov Governorate, Malik was educated at Kharkiv Institute of National Economy (1930). Then, he worked as an economist, as the Communist Party's functionary in Kharkiv, and from 1935 in the Foreign Affairs service in Moscow. He served as Ambassador in Japan from 1942 until 9 August 1945, when the Soviet government declared war on the Japanese Empire. Malik was the Soviet ambassador to the United Nations from 1948 to 1952, and from 1968 to 1976.

At the time of the United Nations Security Council Resolution 82 on 25 June 1950, Malik was boycotting the presence of a Nationalist Chinese representative. His absence enabled the resolution to pass unanimously with a 9–0 vote.

On the floor of the United Nations on 23 June 1951, he proposed an armistice in the Korean War between Red China and North Korea on one hand, and South Korea, the United States, and other United Nations forces on the other.

Malik is also well known for presenting the USSR's justifications for the occupation of Czechoslovakia at the Security Council in August 1968. He vetoed the two resolutions regarding the invasion (resolution requesting the liberation of the arrested Czechoslovak politicians and the removal of the communist armies from Czechoslovakia and the resolution requiring the selection of Special Envoy to Czechoslovakia).

In 1955, as Soviet ambassador to the United Kingdom, he switched on the Blackpool Illuminations.[1]

From 1967 to 1971 he was the head of the Africa department of the Soviet Ministry of Foreign Affairs. During this time he initiated the covert operation Bukran, which established a spy network in several African countries.

Notes

References

  1. "Illuminations". VisitBlackpool.com. History tab.


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