Before becoming commander of the Ukrainian Navy, Hayduk held the staff position in charge of anti-submarine warfare, the position of chief of
search and rescue operations, and was the first deputy chief of staff of the navy. In 2007, he prevented an environmental disaster from ensuing when the leaky Russian vessel
Odisk arrived in Crimea from Sierra Leone carrying ferroalloys. He was promoted to the rank of
rear admiral in 2011. Hayduk was appointed acting commander on 2 March 2014, and commander on 7 March 2014 following the defection of
Denis Berezovsky during the
Russian annexation of Crimea. Berezovsky had been dismissed for "
high treason" after serving only a single day as commander. On 19 March 2014, pro-Russian forces took over the Ukrainian Navy's headquarters at Sevastopol and imprisoned its newly appointed commander-in-chief, Hayduk. Hayduk, along with seven other hostages, was held by the pro-Russian so-called "
Crimean Security Service" and most of these hostages were
tortured while in captivity according to
Kharkiv Human Rights Protection Group. The hostages were released by order of the Russian Defense Minister on 20 March 2014. On 23 August 2014, Hayduk was promoted to vice admiral. Hayduk was dismissed as commander of the Ukrainian navy by President
Poroshenko on 15 April 2016. ==See also==