Mustafa Nayyem

Publicist

Birthday June 28, 1981

Birth Sign Cancer

Birthplace Kabul, Democratic Republic of Afghanistan

Age 42 years old

Nationality Afghanistan

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Mustafa Masi Nayyem (Мустафа Найєм, مصطفی نعیم) is an Afghan-Ukrainian journalist, MP, lecturer at the Kyiv School of Economics, and public figure who was influential in sparking the Euromaidan in Ukraine.

Since January 2023 Nayyem is the head of the State Agency for Restoration and Infrastructure Development.

Prior to this he was Deputy Minister of Infrastructure appointed in August 2021.

Formerly, before his bureaucratic career Nayyem was a reporter for the newspaper Kommersant Ukraine, the TVi channel, and the online newspaper Ukrayinska Pravda.

He also participates in Ukrainian journalists' anti-censorship movement, "Stop the censorship!"

(Стоп цензурі!, Stop tsenzuri!), and Hromadske.TV.

In the parliamentary elections he was elected to the Ukrainian parliament on the list of Petro Poroshenko Bloc.

1979

In Afghanistan, his father, Muhammad Naim (Мухаммад Наїм), had been Minister of Education and was responsible for the construction of educational facilities before the USSR invasion of Afghanistan in December 1979.

After the Soviet invasion, his father did not want to work for the Soviets and quit his post.

1981

Nayyem was born in Kabul in 1981 and lived in an elite district near the Tajbeg Palace.

1984

In 1984, ten days after his younger brother Masi Nayyem was born, their mother died.

He has stated that he is a Pashtun, a "Muslim by birth", and his native tongue is Dari.

1987

In 1987 and because of the destruction of the ongoing Soviet Union's War in Afghanistan, his father went to Moscow to study and met Ukrainian Valentina Kolechko whom he later married in early 1989.

1989

Mustafa Nayyem became fluent in Russian and Ukrainian after he moved with his father to Moscow in August 1989 living near the Nakhimovsky Prospekt metro station and later to Kyiv in 1990 attending 61st school near the Lukyanivsky market.

1998

Nayyem graduated from the Technical Lyceum in Kyiv in 1998, and the Aerospace Systems Department of Kyiv Polytechnic Institute in 2004.

He speaks fluent Ukrainian, Pashto, Russian, and English.

2005

Nayyem worked as a reporter for the Kommersant-Ukrainy newspaper from 2005 to 2007, and then for Shuster LIVE, a political talk show on Ukrainian television, from 2007 to 2011.

2008

He and Anastasia Ivanova who is from Lviv and was a photographer for Kommersant-Ukraine (Коммерсантъ Украина), have a son, Mark-Mikhei (born 13 January 2008), and both mother and son are Jewish.

2009

In 2009, Nayyem received national attention following Ukrayina TV channel's live discussion with then-presidential candidate Viktor Yanukovych.

During the discussion, he questioned Yanukovych about the latter's acquisition of the Mezhyhirya Residence.

2010

In 2010, Nayem was briefly detained by police officers, reportedly as a result of racial profiling for "persons of Caucasian appearance" (a common local term for people from the Caucasus).

The following day, Nayem wrote an article in which described the events that led to his detention.

He stated, "Xenophobia should not become the face of Ukrainian nationality" and requested the dismissal of one of the officers responsible.

Nayyem frequently contributes news and articles to Ukrayinska Pravda.

2011

From September 2011 to late April 2013, he worked for the Ukrainian television channel TVi.

After resigning due to a conflict with the channel's new management, he started a web project together with colleagues who also left the channel.

Their project was named Hromadske.TV.

Using Facebook, Nayyem was one of the first activists to urge Ukrainians to gather on Maidan Nezalezhnosti (Independence Square) in Kyiv to protest Viktor Yanukovych's decision to "pause" preparations for signing the European Union–Ukraine Association Agreement (with the European Union).

2013

His post on Facebook on November 21, 2013, was a summons to rally for the Euromaidan protests which led to the overthrow of the Yanukovych government, in the so-called Revolution of Dignity.

2014

Nayyem was included in the electoral list of Petro Poroshenko Bloc (PPB) and elected to the Verkhovna Rada (Ukraine's national parliament) on the parliamentary elections of October 26, 2014.

He was one of dozens of Euromaidan activists who pivoted from street politics into politics, where they sought to spearhead reform and turn Ukraine into a prosperous European state.

Nayyem was a member of the Committee of the Verkhovna Rada on issues of European integration.

At the Rada session of 2 December 2014 he was the only deputy who voted against the cabinet of Arseniy Yatsenyuk.

Gradually he began to criticize the Petro Poroshenko Bloc (PPB) more and more and stopped voting in sync with it.

2016

His brother Masi Nayem is a lawyer and, in April 2016, deployed as a Ukrainian paratrooper to the Donbas - Avdiivka industrial zone which was the hottest point of the Russo-Ukrainian War.

During the 2022 full scale Russian invasion of Ukraine Masi Nayem returned to the front.

On 5 June 2022 his brother Mustafa Nayyem reported that he had been seriously injured.

Masi Nayem survived his injuries, but lost one eye.

2019

Nayyem did not take part in the 2019 Ukrainian parliamentary election.

According to deputy head of the PPB faction Oleksiy Honcharenko by February 2019 he had not attended PPB faction meetings for several years.