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Born
at
Pravets,
near
Botevgrad,
Bulgaria,
Todor
Zhivkov
was
First
secretary
of
the
ruling
Bulgarian
Communist
Party's
Central
Committee
(1954-89)
and
president
of
Bulgaria
(1971-89).
His
35
years
as
Bulgaria's
ruler
made
him
the
longest-serving
leader
in
any
of
the
Soviet-bloc
nations
of
eastern
Europe.
The
son
of
poor
peasants,
Zhivkov
drifted
to
the
Bulgarian
capital
of
Sofia
in
his
youth
and,
in
the
late
1920s,
joined
the
Komsomol,
the
youth
league
of
the
outlawed
Communist
Party.
He
rose
in
the
party
and
during
World
War
II
helped
organize
the
resistance
movement
known
as
the
People's
Liberation
Insurgent
Army.
After
the
war
and
the
institution
of a
Soviet-sponsored
communist
government
in
Bulgaria,
Zhivkov
held
increasingly
important
posts,
including
the
command
of
the
People's
Militia,
which
arrested
thousands
of
political
opponents.
He
became
a
full
member
of
the
Politburo
in
1951.
In
March
1954,
he
was
made
first
secretary
of
the
Central
Committee
--
the
youngest
leader
of
any
nation
in
the
Soviet
bloc
--
and,
as a
protégé
of
the
Soviet
leader
Nikita
S.
Khrushchev,
emerged
as
the
strongman
in
the
internal
party
struggles
that
followed.
From
1962
to
1971
Zhivkov
served
as
premier
of
Bulgaria
and
in
the
latter
year
was
elected
president
of
the
State
Council
formed
by
Bulgaria's
new
constitution.
In
1965
he
survived
an
attempted
coup
d'état
by
dissident
party
members
and
military
officers--the
first
ever
within
a
communist
regime.
Zhivkov
hewed
closely
to
the
Soviet
line
in
both
domestic
and
foreign
affairs.
He
collectivized
his
country's
agriculture,
firmly
repressed
internal
dissent,
and
cultivated
close
ties
with
Khrushchev's
successor,
Leonid
Brezhnev.
Zhivkov
proved
to
be a
competent
economic
manager,
and
under
his
leadership
industrialization
proceeded
steadily
in
Bulgaria
and
the
living
standards
of
its
people
rose
substantially.
But
when
communist
governments
across
eastern
Europe
began
to
collapse
in
1989,
the
aged
Zhivkov
resigned
all
his
posts
in
November
of
that
year
in
order
to
make
way
for
a
more
moderate
communist
leadership.
He
was
subsequently
expelled
from
the
Bulgarian
Communist
Party
in
December
and
was
placed
under
arrest
in
January
1990.
Zhivkov
was
convicted
of
embezzlement
in
1992
and
sentenced
to
seven
years'
imprisonment.
He
was
allowed
to
serve
his
sentence
under
house
arrest
on
account
of
his
failing
health,
and
in
1998
he
was
reinstated
as a
member
of
the
Communist
Party's
successor
organization,
the
Socialist
Party.
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