Yahoo Italia Ricerca nel Web

Risultati di ricerca

  1. Ján Čarnogurský (born 1 January 1944) is a Slovak former politician, who served as the prime minister of Slovakia (1991–1992) [1] and the former chairman of the Christian Democratic Movement (1990–2000). Today he is chairman of Slovak-Russian association with headquarters in Bratislava. He is married and has four children. Before 1989.

  2. Ján Čarnogurský (Bratislava, 1º gennaio 1944) è un politico slovacco. È stato Primo ministro della Repubblica Socialista Slovacca (ai tempi parte della Cecoslovacchia) dal maggio 1991 al giugno 1992. Dal 1990 al 2000 è stato Presidente del Movimento Cristiano-Democratico.

  3. Ján Čarnogurský (* 1. január 1944, Bratislava, Slovensko) je slovenský advokát a bývalý disident, člen Bratislavskej päťky, kresťansko-demokratický politik, v rokoch 19911992 predseda vlády SR . Život. Na strednú školu bol prijatý v Kežmarku, po roku prestúpil do Bratislavy, kde zmaturoval.

  4. Ján Čarnogurský (1944) - Ústav pamäti národa. Životopis. „Nezabúdajme na to, že Komunistická strana ako taká naozaj zanikla. Nebola zakázaná, ale zanikla demokratickými prostriedkami, pretože spoločnosť ju tu jednoducho nechcela.“ Príbeh pamätníka. Ján Čarnogurský sa narodil 1. januára 1944 v Bratislave v katolíckej rodine.

  5. Ján Čarnogurský (1944) - Ústav pamäti národa. Biography: “We have to keep in mind that the Communist Party really ceased to exist. It wasn’t prohibited; its existence came to an end by democratic means, just because our society didn’t want it here.” Ján Čarnogurský was born on January 1, 1944, in Bratislava into a catholic family.

  6. 30 ott 1998 · minister spravodlivosti Slovenskej republiky. od 30.10.1998 do 15.10. 2002. Ministerstvo spravodlivosti. Ján Čarnogurský sa narodil 1. januára 1944 v Bratislave. Právnickú fakultu Karlovej univerzity (PF KU) v Prahe absolvoval v roku 1969. Nasledujúce dva roky pôsobil ako advokát v Bratislave.

  7. 23 dic 2002 · A PRISONER of the communist regime, Ján Čarnogurský was literally whisked from jail to a political podium following the 1989 revolution. He served as prime minister from 1991-92, during which time he helped prepare the ground for Slovak independence, as well as justice minister from 1998 to 2002.