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Umerov: 'Wonder' dealmaker from Crimea leading Ukraine peace talks
Rustem Umerov, who heads Ukraine's delegation at peace talks with Russia on Friday, is a skilled and pragmatic negotiator, hailed by his colleagues as a worker of diplomatic "wonders".
The 43-year-old former businessman became defence minister in 2023, a year and half into Russia's invasion, and has spearheaded some of Kyiv's most sensitive wartime diplomacy -- with Russia and the West.
He has also been embroiled in scandals during his tenure, accused of a lack of transparency and the subject of a probe into alleged abuse of power.
But Umerov is still one of only a handful of Ukrainians with experience brokering deals involving Moscow through the war.
He also has the ear of Andriy Yermak, the powerful head of Ukraine's presidential office.
President Volodymyr Zelensky said that Umerov would lead a slimmed-down Ukrainian team at talks in Istanbul.
Kyiv has few expectations of a breakthrough, especially after Russian President Vladimir Putin declined to come and despatched a relatively low-level delegation.
After seeing him in talks with US officials in Saudi Arabia earlier this year, Pavlo Palisa -- a respected former army commander and deputy head of Zelensky's office -- hailed Umerov's negotiating prowess.
"I am very impressed with his manner of conversing with partners. His perfect English and eastern charm work wonders," Palisa said in an interview published in April.
Umerov has highlighted his unflappability.
"It's impossible to put pressure on me," he said in 2022.
- Crimean roots -
Umerov is a prominent member of the Tatar Muslim community from Crimea, the Black Sea peninsula annexed by Russia in 2014 that Kyiv says it will never give up hopes of regaining.
His nomination as defence minister in 2023 was called a "beautiful political gesture" by Sergiy Leshchenko, an adviser to Yermak.
It was a sign that "there will be no compromise on Crimea," he told AFP.
Umerov was born in 1982 in Soviet Uzbekistan where his family had been deported under Joseph Stalin.
He moved to Crimea as a child when the Tatars -- who make up some 12-15 percent of Crimea's population -- were allowed to return.
Before being elected an MP in 2019 with a pro-European party, he had a background in business and ran an investment company.
Announcing that he would lead the Ukrainian delegation, Zelensky highlighted Umerov's fluency in English and Turkish, as well as Ukrainian and Russian.
Like Russia's top negotiator -- Kremlin aide Vladimir Medinsky -- Umerov was part of the failed 2022 talks between Russia and Ukraine.
But he has conducted successful indirect diplomacy with the Russians.
He took part in talks to set up a 2022 grain deal -- the most substantial agreement involving both sides struck since Russia invaded.
Brokered by Turkey and the United Nations, it enabled agricultural exports from Ukraine's Black Sea ports.
Russia abandoned the initiative after a year, but it helped Ukraine start exporting millions of tonnes of grain -- shipments it managed to boost following the break-down of the deal.
Umerov also played a key role in a major 2022 prisoner exchange in which Russia released several top commanders who defended the besieged port city of Mariupol.
- 'Pragmatist', scandals -
Umerov is "charismatic" and "a good communicator" who is "quickly liked" by people around him, Leshchenko said.
"He knows how to get results with few resources, thanks to his personal contacts," he added.
However, last September he was accused by three prominent experts of presiding over a "ministry of chaos", and criticised for a lack of transparency over procurement, including related to Western military support.
Ukraine's anti-corruption watchdog in January announced it was investigating Umerov for alleged abuse of power after he overturned a procurement decision.
He denied the accusations and said he was trying to restore confidentiality to sensitive state orders.
Ukraine's military has been blighted by corruption amid a massive influx of cash to the defence sector during the war.
H.Gerber--VB