Kulyabko Evgeniy Yurievich
Born in 1908 in St. Petersburg; Russian; Member of the All-Union Communist Party (Bolsheviks). In 1929 he was called up for military service. He served in the Black Sea Fleet and was demobilized from the destroyer Frunze. After passing the exam for the course at the Leningrad Marine Technical School, he entered the Baltic State Shipping Company. In 1936 he was seconded to the Burmeister and Wine shipyard in Copenhagen to accept electrical equipment for ships being built for the USSR. With the last of these ships, the Kuznetsstroy, he set sail as a radio operator. On 19 February 1938, the Kuznetsstroy was forced to call at the Japanese port of Hakodite. The ship's crew was interrogated by the Japanese police. Upon arrival in Vladivostok, he was arrested on 12 April 1938 on charges of providing the Japanese with classified information, which was not confirmed by the investigation. He was sentenced on 20 March 1939 by the Military Tribunal of the Pacific Fleet under Art. 58-1a to 10 years in a labor camp with a 5-year ban on rights and confiscation of property. Imprisoned in Svobodlag. In June 1948, he was sent into exile to the village of Podtesovo in the Yenisei district. He worked as an electrician at a floating dockyard. He was released in December 1955 and went to Leningrad. He was rehabilitated on 11/18/1955.
Documents (2)
Fund 02 (Б-1) / Inventory 1 / Case Кулябко Анна Васильевна
1. Autobiography of Kulyabko A.V. with brief information about her family.


