The Netherlands is the largest foreign trade partner of the Russian Federation. Russia's trade representative in the Netherlands has died. He became the ninth Russian diplomat who died since November Personnel reserve from Tomsk

At the end of 2012, the Russian-Dutch trade turnover reached a record level - 82.7 billion dollars, and in 2013 - decreased by 9.3%. The trade representative writes about the prospects for cooperation between these two countries Russian Federation in the Kingdom of the Netherlands Alexander Cherevko.

The Kingdom of the Netherlands is the most important trade and economic partner of the Russian Federation. In terms of trade with Russia, the Netherlands ranks second in the world (after China) and first in Europe.

At the end of 2012, the Russian-Dutch trade turnover increased by 20.6% and reached a record level of USD 82.7 billion. This is twice as much as in the post-crisis year of 2008 ($40 billion). In 2013, in the context of a slowdown in the global economy, trade with the Netherlands decreased slightly. In January-August 2013, this indicator decreased by 9.3% compared to the same period in 2012. Russian exports decreased by 9.6% to $46.7 billion, imports - by 5% to $3.7 billion USD

Reference:

In structure Russian export to the Netherlands, the main share of deliveries falls on two commodity groups: mineral products (mainly products of the fuel and energy complex) - 88.2%; as well as metals and products from them - 10.4%.

The structure of imports is formed by the following commodity groups: machinery, equipment and vehicles- 30.9%; food products and agricultural raw materials - 34.3%; products chemical industry - 25,7%.

Investment cooperation also demonstrates positive dynamics. Since 2002, the Netherlands has more than 10 times increased its investment in the Russian economy. By the end of the first half of 2013, the volume of accumulated Dutch investments in Russia amounted to 66.5 billion US dollars, of which direct investments amounted to 23 billion US dollars.

The volume of accumulated Russian investments in the Netherlands is $26.9 billion, of which $23.1 billion, that is, 86%, is direct investment. This indicates that Russian business considers the Netherlands as a strategic platform for investment.

The Russian companies Gazprom, Lukoil, the Summa group are actively cooperating with their Dutch partners.

Reference:

OAO Gazprom cooperates with Gasunie in the framework of the Nord Stream project (Gasunie owns 9% of the shares), with Shell in the framework of the Sakhalin-2 project and in the development of the Arctic continental shelf.

JSC Gazprom Neft in April 2013 created with Shell joint venture for the development of shale oil reserves.

OAO Lukoil owns a 45% stake in a refinery in the Dutch city of Vlissingen, as well as a network of 46 filling stations in the Netherlands.

Summa Group is building a terminal for transshipment of oil and oil products in the port of Rotterdam.

Dutch companies occupy strong positions in the Russian market. Of particular note are Shell (oil and gas industry), Philips (health care, lighting equipment), Unilever (consumer goods), Heineken (brewing industry), Royal DSM (chemical industry).

Reference:

Shell is involved in the development of the Salym Group oil fields in the Khanty-Mansi Autonomous Okrug, as well as in the Sakhalin-2 project. The company also owns a plant for the production of lubricants in the Tver region (Torzhok).

Royal Boskalis carries out dredging works in the Arctic, implements a project to build a complex of flood protection structures in St. Petersburg.

In the field of medicine, a major joint project between Philips and NIPK Elektron is being implemented - the production of high-tech medical equipment - a 16-slice computed tomograph.

Akzo Nobel, a manufacturer of paints and protective coatings, owns a number of manufacturing enterprises in Russia: factories for the production of decorative paints and mixing paints for auto coatings in the Moscow region, a factory for painting concrete metal products in Lipetsk.

Concern "Royal DSM" in 2011 opened a plant for the production of feed premixes in Tatarstan. The construction of the second such plant is expected in the Moscow region.

A plant for the production of engineering plastics was built in Togliatti together with OAO Kuibyshevazot and a trade company for their sales. Royal DSM also plans to set up joint innovative enterprises with the Russian Technologies State Corporation in the field of biotechnology and the production of heavy-duty materials.

Friesland Campina has been operating in Russia since 1992, when it was the first to import yogurt to the Russian market. In 2000, the company built its own enterprise for the production of milk and dairy products in the Moscow region (Stupino).

The Heineken company owns 8 breweries in various regions of Russia, thanks to which it occupies the third place in the Russian beer market.

The basis of the economy of the Netherlands are small and medium-sized enterprises (hereinafter referred to as SMEs).

According to statistics, there are about 830 thousand SMEs in the Netherlands, which is 99.7% of the total number of companies operating in the country's economy. At the same time, 50% of companies have less than 10 employees in their staff. These 99.7% SMEs account for 58% of the total trade turnover, they employ 60% of the working population of the country and only about 6 thousand enterprises in the Netherlands are considered as large companies.

In the Netherlands, as in other EU countries, SMEs include companies with no more than 250 employees and an annual turnover of up to 50 million euros. Small enterprises are companies with less than 50 employees and an annual turnover of no more than 10 million euros. If a company has less than 10 employees and an annual turnover of no more than 2 million euros, then such enterprises are considered as very small enterprises (micro enterprises).

The percentage of SMEs by number of employees in the Netherlands is as follows:

- companies with only one employee - 22%;

- companies with 1 to 10 employees - 28%;

- companies with 10 to 99 employees - 40%;

- companies with 100 to 250 employees - 10%.

In connection with the large role of SMEs in the economic life of the country, a special Economic Institute for Small and Medium Businesses (Economische Instituut voor het Midden en Kleinbedrijf-EIM) was created in the Netherlands. This institute is a research center that studies the processes of economic and social character associated with the activities of SMEs. Institute specialists collect and analyze information at the national and regional levels. Information about the activities of various units of small and medium-sized businesses is regularly published, information is provided on the development of SMEs in the provinces.

The Dutch government pays constant attention to the development of small and medium-sized businesses. On May 17, 2005, the Lower House of the States General initiated the adoption of the so-called "Note on Spatial Regulation" (Nota ruimte), which was supported by a majority of the members of the Upper House of Parliament.

This document sets out the basic principles of the territorial structure of the Netherlands and it is designed for the period up to 2020, in addition, the document contains forecasts up to 2030.

The effective use of available resources for the Netherlands, especially in terms of spatial planning, is an important factor successful business development. At the heart of the "Spatial Regulation Note" are issues of decentralization, which implies, first of all, less dependence of the provinces on the Government of the Netherlands and greater independence with higher responsibility.

This is most directly related to the creation and development of SMEs. When making decisions on the expediency of organizing or expanding an enterprise, the responsibility for making a decision in this case lies entirely with the local Chamber of Commerce and Industry and the regional administration.

Local authorities are obliged to be well aware of the plans and opportunities of enterprises operating in their territory and to help them in business development. It is the close interaction between administrative structures and business of the provinces of the Netherlands ensures the economic development of the country.

In order to coordinate in the field of small and medium-sized businesses in 1995, on the basis of the Dutch Christian Entrepreneurial Union (Nederlandse Christelijk Ondernemers Verbond NCOV) and the Royal Netherlands Association of Entrepreneurs (Koninklijk Nederlands Ondernemers Verbond KNOV), which existed since 1902, a special association was created, which received name Royal Association of Small and Medium Enterprises of the Netherlands (Koninklijke Vereniging MKB Nederland), whose main tasks are: 1. Creation of an entrepreneurial climate that enhances the opportunities of every entrepreneur. 2. Active positioning of the country's small and medium-sized businesses at the EU level. Royal

The Netherlands SME Association is the largest business association of its kind in the Netherlands. It has 150 industry organizations and 600 business unions uniting about 186,000 enterprises. The Royal Association of SMEs of the Netherlands consists of the following clusters:

1. National Shopping Council.

2. Industry and construction.

3. Service provision

4. social sector and the provision of social services.

5. Free time and leisure.

6. Council of all clusters.

The organization has seven regional divisions. Since September 1, 2009, the head office has been located in The Hague in the same building as the Organization of Industrialists and Employers of the Netherlands (VNO-NEC). SMEs in the Netherlands are experiencing some difficulties in connection with international economic crisis. For this reason, the government initiated new form obtaining a loan "Qkredit". The amount of this loan is 150,000 euros, it is intended exclusively for small and medium-sized enterprises, if they have been refused by banking structures. The first loan was issued at the end of November 2013.

The governments of the EU countries are undertaking anti-crisis programs, including a set of emergency measures to provide financial assistance to SMEs, which basically boil down to the following three areas.

1. Supporting the level of sales of SMEs based on the provision of export loans and warranty obligations, reducing the tax burden, providing a deferral of tax payments, as well as taking measures to reduce the terms of payments by all partners in business relations and ensuring the continuity of cash flows.

2. Facilitating the access of SMEs to financial resources, timely delivery working capital, restructuring credit debt, expanding guarantee schemes and improving repayment terms for existing loans.

3. Providing financial support to SMEs for the implementation of existing investment and innovation projects with high commercial attractiveness in order to ensure market entry with new products and services that are in high demand.

Along with these EU programs, the Government of the Netherlands is taking measures to provide additional support to the country's SMEs.

Loans to SMEs under the guarantee of the state.

The maximum loan amount is set at 250,000 euros. It is assumed that a moderate credit limit at a high rate state guarantees will allow the maximum number of SMEs to apply for loans. For SMEs provided consulting services on issues of obtaining a loan at the offices of banking institutions, in a special support service, as well as in a specially created state Internet resource.

microfinance.

This measure is for start-up entrepreneurs who require a loan or initial assistance. Microfinance is understood as a loan of up to 35 thousand euros with simultaneous provision of consulting assistance or mentoring.

Support for innovative research programs for small businesses (program "SBIR" (SBIR).

Innovation-oriented enterprises can count on receiving subsidies under the SBIR program, which is focused on new and innovative products, processes and services. The program is an initiative of the Dutch Ministry of Economic Affairs, which developed the project together with six other ministries. SBIR provides an opportunity for Dutch companies to participate in orders for government needs in six key areas of the economy.

Subsidies for innovative achievements under SME contracts.

SMEs with 15 to 35 employees who jointly develop and execute an innovation plan can receive subsidies for this purpose. In this case, a three-year contract on innovative achievements is signed with the Ministry of Economy of the Netherlands.

Innovative loan for SMEs.

SMEs can apply for support in financing an innovative project in the amount of 300 thousand euros to 5 million euros, which is at the stage of laboratory or technical development, which has a clear commercial perspective and with confirmation of self-financing in the amount of 65% of the project cost. At the same time, a justification should be provided for the impossibility of implementing the project without attracting additional funds, as well as confirmation of the actual deadlines for completing the project within four years.

An important condition for the success of the Dutch economy is the joint work of business, government and science. In 2011, the Government of the Netherlands set the goal of becoming one of the five most competitive innovative economies in the world by 2018. For this, 9 so-called "top sectors" of the country's economy were identified: the creative industry (architecture, design, computer games, etc.); high tech(aviation, space, 95% car recycling, etc.); "life science" (medical and biological technologies); agro-industrial complex and agricultural processing (the Netherlands ranks second in the world in exports of agricultural products after the United States, labor productivity in the Dutch agriculture 2 times higher than the EU average); logistics (port of Rotterdam, Schiphol airport, inland waterways); water management, water technology (a quarter of the Netherlands is below sea level); energy (Shell, wind energy, second-generation biofuels); chemistry (DSM, AkzoNobel); landscape gardening art. Leading top managers were appointed to head these "top sectors" at the suggestion of the Dutch business, and 1.5 billion euros were allocated from the country's budget for their development. Since the government clearly outlined its priorities, private investors began to invest in the development of these sectors. As a result, according to the results of 2012 (according to the European Economic Forum in Davos), the Dutch have already taken sixth place among the most competitive and innovative companies in the world.

A major role in the development of trade and economic cooperation between the two countries was played by the Year of Russia in the Netherlands and the Year of the Netherlands in Russia (hereinafter referred to as the cross year), which took place in 2013.

During the "cross" year 2013, more than 20 business missions of Russian regions took place in the Netherlands, including 2013. Moscow, St. Petersburg, the Republics of Tatarstan, Bashkortostan, Astrakhan, Belgorod, Volgograd, Voronezh, Kaliningrad, Kaluga, Leningrad, Murmansk, Nizhny Novgorod, Novosibirsk, Penza, Ryazan, Saratov, Tomsk and Tula regions.

In turn, Dutch companies actively held their business events in the city. Moscow, St. Petersburg, the Republic of Tatarstan, Belgorod, Volgograd, Leningrad, Murmansk, Nizhny Novgorod, Novosibirsk, Rostov, Sakhalin, Sverdlovsk, Tomsk, Tula, Chelyabinsk regions, Altai, Krasnodar and Stavropol regions.

As a result of business missions conducted in 2013, more than 30 agreements and contracts were signed, 12 commercial projects are being implemented. Currently, the Dutch business is actively involved in the implementation of agricultural projects (Moscow region, Leningrad region, Belgorod region, Voronezh region, Tatarstan, etc.), infrastructure projects (Moscow, St. Petersburg, etc.) , energy projects (Sakhalin Region, Khanty-Mansi Autonomous Okrug, YNAO, etc.), healthcare and environmental projects (Moscow Region, Sverdlovsk Region, St. Petersburg, etc.) and other sectors of the Russian economy.

The Trade Representation of the Russian Federation in the Kingdom of the Netherlands invites interested Russian enterprises to cooperate with Dutch SMEs in all 9 "top sectors" of the Dutch economy.

No results.

, Kalininsky district , Krasnodar region, RSFSR, the USSR- September 15, 2017, Moscow, the Russian Federation) - Russian statesman, official Trade Representative of the Russian Federation in Netherlands. In the 1970s - 1980s - one of the Komsomol leaders Tomsk region(including on the move) MTR, then in the regional committee Komsomol), in 2000-2011. - one of the heads of the Administration of the Tomsk region in the position of vice-governor.

Biography

Alexander Cherevko was born and raised in Cossack family in Krasnodar Territory. After graduating with honors from a local secondary school, he left for Siberia and entered Tomsk State University, where in 1981 he graduated from the Faculty of Applied Mathematics and Cybernetics of TSU. As a student, he took an active part in the movement of student construction teams of the Tomsk region, the commander of the SSO of the university, a member of the Komsomol Committee of TSU and, since 1978, a member of the headquarters of the SSO of the Tomsk region under the regional committee of the Komsomol.

In 1981-1983 - service in Armed forces of the USSR.

Since 2011 A.N. Cherevko worked in Government of the Russian Federation. He was appointed Deputy Director of the Department of Europe within the Ministry of Economic Development of the Russian Federation. In this position, he became the initiator and developer of a number of international projects for Tomsk, among which is the well-known project "Medicine of the Future".

Since January 2012, he was transferred to economic and diplomatic work - he was appointed to the post of Trade Representative of our country in Netherlands (Amsterdam). In this position, in addition to all his main work, he self-initially took a number of steps to develop scientific, innovative and educational cooperation between universities and research institutes in Holland and Tomsk. None of the numerous Tomsk delegations traveling or working in the Netherlands was left without attention, care, help and simple Russian hospitality from A.N. Cherevko. Many residents of Tomsk have managed to obtain diplomas or professional certificates by undergoing training, advanced training or internships in this country.

disease oncology struck the Tomsk international specialist suddenly. The first hospitalization and a disappointing diagnosis occurred in January 2017. A sharp progression of the disease began in April, in July A.N. Cherevko was hospitalized in a Dutch clinic for urgent treatment.

In September, Alexander Cherevko's condition deteriorated significantly, he was transferred to the intensive care unit. After September 10, Western European doctors refused to continue treatment due to hopelessness. On September 14, the Government of the Russian Federation conducts an evacuation to Moscow by a special aircraft Ministry of Emergency Situations. However, in a Moscow clinic, without regaining consciousness, Alexander Cherevko died on September 16, 2017.

The news of his death was sudden and unexpected for many friends in Tomsk: back in June and July, he was full of plans and promising projects for the future…

Alexander Cherevko, trade representative of the Russian Federation in the Netherlands, died in Moscow. The death was confirmed to TASS on Friday, September 15, by the wife of the diplomat and the press service of the Ministry of Economic Development. He became the ninth Russian diplomat to die since November last year.

"The Minister of Economic Development of the Russian Federation Maxim Oreshkin and employees of the ministry express their deep and sincere condolences to the families and friends of Russia's trade representative in the Netherlands Alexander Cherevko in connection with his untimely death," the ministry said.

Petr Polshnikov, who once worked in the Latin American department of the Russian Foreign Ministry, was found in December 2016 with a gunshot wound to the head in an apartment on Balaklavsky Prospekt in southern Moscow. The Foreign Ministry said that this was an accident not related to the official activities of the deceased.

These two deaths were the most suspicious to The Washington Post.

In December, the Ambassador Extraordinary and Plenipotentiary of the Russian Federation to Turkey was killed Andrey Karlov. During the opening of an exhibition at the contemporary art center, he was shot several times in the back by former police officer Mevlut Altintash.

In the same month, he was found dead in Ust-Kamenogorsk Roman Skrylnikov, temporary employee of the Russian consulate in Kazakhstan, the official cause of death is a heart attack. However, the diplomatic mission specified that the deceased was not a diplomat and that he was sent to the Consulate General of the Russian Federation in this administrative center of the East Kazakhstan region.

In addition, a 61-year-old was found dead in his car in Moscow in December. Oleg Erovinkin, head of one of the departments of Rosneft, the former head of the KGB, who, according to some suspicions, helped compile the dossier on Trump. He died of a heart attack.

In January, a 55-year-old Russian consul in Greece was found dead. Andrey Malanin cause of death is a heart attack. In the same month, at the age of 68, the Russian ambassador to India died in New Delhi. Alexander Kadakin.

In February, Russia's permanent representative to the UN died in New York. Vitaly Churkin.

Russia's ambassador to Sudan died in August Mirgayas Shirinsky. Usually during this period in Khartoum the temperature exceeds 38 degrees Celsius, and Shirinsky was 62 years old. Colleagues of the diplomat told reporters that he had problems with high blood pressure.

"In a world where Russian government regularly accused of killing enemies with exotic poisons, amateur sleuths are quick to suspect, with no evidence, that anyone is hitting back. And since there is very little information about the deceased, it is very easy to build conspiracy theories. Who were they - diplomats or spies? Faithful servants of the Kremlin or traitors? Where facts are in short supply, theories are in abundance,” writes Anna Nemtsova, author of The Daily Beast.

According to The Washington Post, Shirinsky was the seventh diplomat to die since November, and none of them died after a long illness (actually - the eighth, Alexander Kadakin was not included in the calculation - possibly because he died "after a short illness" ). This fuels conspiracy theories and one of America's favorite plot moves - "a contract killing by the Russians."

"There are just so many strange coincidences in the world," expert Rolf Mowett-Larssen, who served in the CIA for 23 years, told the newspaper. "For all that, I believe that this story requires a deeper investigation."

"Undoubtedly, Putin operates outside the rule of law. Even if we talk about history, Russian employees would be forced to disappear if they were compromised by "moles" from the American establishment. I'm not saying that this is what happens to these diplomats, but if it's true "That would be a colossal story," Mowatt-Larssen said. "Even in a Russian context, the elimination of diplomats is rare. However, Putin may like the fact that diplomats are afraid of him - he probably finds it quite convenient."

Alexander Cherevko was born in 1959.

After serving in the army, he led the student detachment of the Tomsk regional committee of the Komsomol, worked at the TNTs SB AS USSR, then in various management positions of large Tomsk enterprises.

In 2000, he was appointed head of the representative office of the Tomsk Region under the Government of the Russian Federation,

in 2011 - Deputy Director of the Department of Europe of the Ministry of Economic Development of the Russian Federation. Since January 2012, he has been in charge of the trade mission of the Russian Federation in the Netherlands.

The building of the Russian embassy is located in the center of Amsterdam - on Museum Square, opposite the Van Gogh Museum. Previously, this building belonged to the family of a famous jeweler of Jewish origin. During the Second World War, the family was repressed, having disappeared in a concentration camp. The building itself was used as a guest house by the Gestapo, and in 1945 it was donated to the Soviet Union.

The career of Alexander Cherevko from Tomsk can be called dizzying: in the 1990s he confidently walked up the career ladder in the region, since 2000 he headed the representative office of the Tomsk region under the Government of the Russian Federation, then headed the Department of Europe at the Ministry of Economic Development, and now heads the trade mission of the Russian Federation in the Kingdom of the Netherlands . “I am not a politician, but a manager,” says Cherevko about his mission.

Personnel reserve from Tomsk

When the personnel commission at the Ministry of Economic Development considered candidates for the post of trade representative of the Russian Federation in the Netherlands, belonging to Tomsk became a trump card for Cherevko. The main task of the trade mission is to attract investments to the regions of the Russian Federation and promote Russian projects in the Netherlands, primarily innovative ones. And the commission took into account the fact that Alexander Nikolayevich knows the region where there is a SEZ, the strategy innovative development, successful experience with investors.

Cherevko himself has a successful experience of working with investors. For example, the appearance of the Metro company in our region is largely his merit.

- The appearance of the Metro in Tomsk is the result of long joint negotiations, the ability to seek compromises and make mutually beneficial decisions (there was a hitch with the site: the city took a long time to select a site, the company was determined even longer. - Ed.), - says Alexander Cherevko. – I would like to note that Tomsk City Hall has every opportunity to work actively to attract foreign investors. With the support of the governor and federal bodies power over high level I think that the city will be able to implement many projects in the coming years. For my part, I will try to make both Dutch and European companies that have their representative offices and subsidiaries in Holland see Tomsk as a worthy partner.

The mission of the trade representative

“The Trade Mission of the Russian Federation in the Netherlands is, in fact, a representative office of Russian regions, small and medium-sized businesses of Russia in this country,” explains Alexander Cherevko. - And my main task is to help find partners for the development of cooperation. In the spring of 2012, meetings were held with several regional delegations from Buryatia, Nizhny Novgorod, Belgorod and Kaluga regions. In general, we proceed from the fact that Moscow and St. Petersburg will manage without us, however, as well as large companies: Gazprom, Lukoil, Transneft - all of them have the opportunity to work through their representative offices. Small and medium businesses do not have this opportunity. We independently look for contacts, invite partners and negotiate directly.

Why is the Netherlands, a small European country, so interested in Russia in terms of developing business ties? Alexander Cherevko gives a few figures as an example:

- At the end of last year, the trade turnover between the Netherlands and Russia amounted to 68.5 billion dollars. According to this indicator, the Netherlands ranks third, behind China and Germany. The volume of accumulated investments of the Netherlands in the Russian Federation amounted to 49.1 billion dollars, and according to this indicator, the kingdom holds the second place after offshore Cyprus. The total volume of accumulated direct investments at the end of 2011 was $23.3 billion. The Dutch side honestly admits that the share of Dutch companies in trade and investments is only 10-15%. The rest is the share of other European countries trading with Russia through subsidiaries of their companies located in Holland and investments of Russian companies located in Holland. Why in Holland? Yes, because administration is more profitable here, it is more profitable to pay taxes and do business from the point of view of state support, in terms of logistics, etc. Today, the whole of Europe trades and invests with Russia through Holland.

The staff of the trade representative office, according to Cherevko, has now focused its work on three areas of development.

- The first is the implementation of the agreement between the Prime Minister of the Russian Federation and the Prime Minister of the Netherlands on the creation of a mechanism for co-financing and co-investment of Dutch investment projects on the territory of the Russian Federation and Russian projects on the territory of the Netherlands. The second is the development of regional cooperation. The third direction is the implementation of the joint Russian-Dutch statement made in May last year by Deputy Prime Ministers Zubkov and Verhagen on developing partnerships for modernization. We focus our work on comparing Russian technology platforms with innovation clusters in the Netherlands. Currently, about 30 of them have already been approved, and there is a purely Tomsk one - "Medicine of the Future". It would also be interesting for us to identify a list of all projects that we would like to implement and Russian companies, and Dutch. Moreover, these projects could receive co-financing from VEB and the European Bank for Reconstruction and Development. $2 billion has been reserved for the implementation of such projects.

Russian Ambassador to the Netherlands Alexander Shulgin told TASS that the trade representative was hospitalized in early August. In the course of treatment, complications appeared associated with the underlying disease diagnosed in him. Alexander Cherevko's condition worsened, and about ten days ago he was transferred to the intensive care unit and connected to life support machines. The situation was consistently dire until September 12, when the Dutch doctors said they saw no further prospects in the fight for the patient's life, and announced their intention to take him off life support systems on September 13.

Minister of Economic Development of the Russian Federation Maxim Oreshkin and employees of the Ministry express their deep and sincere condolences to the families and friends of Russia's Trade Representative in the Netherlands Alexander Cherevko on his untimely death.
Alexander Nikolaevich Cherevko is a professional, economist and diplomat, a true patriot of Russia. Thanks to his active participation, the development of Russian-Dutch trade and economic relations has reached a new qualitative level. During his long career, he always solved the tasks with honor, was a real example for colleagues and subordinates.
This is how Alexander Cherevko will be remembered by everyone who knew, appreciated and respected this wonderful person.
Information about the place and time of farewell to him will be announced later.