Tarak Valesko

President of Karti. President of the Kartisian Suprematic Party (KSP).

Birthday: 7.10.1952

Lives in: Karti

President of Karti and the Kartisian Suprematic Party (KSP). Patriot committed to the safety and prosperity of my country and the future of its citizens.

Tarak Valesko (born 7 October 1952) is the President of Karti and leader of the Kartisian Suprematic Party (KSP). Born in Meppo to a railway foreman and a seamstress, he grew up in one of the city’s crowded worker districts, where shortages and frequent power cuts shaped his views on discipline and order. Valesko excelled at school and was noticed by KSP mentors during a youth brigade rally, entering the party’s training cadre by his late teens. After studying industrial logistics in Meppo’s technical institute, he worked in the coal transport authority, rising quickly through administrative ranks. His reputation for maintaining efficiency on strategic rail corridors won him allies among both industrial bosses and security services. By the 1980s he was a visible KSP official, orchestrating loyalty campaigns in mining regions hit by unrest. Valesko entered the Politburo in the 1990s, ensuring contracts and privileges for elites while centralizing energy export frameworks through Zorinsk.

He became President of Karti in 2004 after years as deputy leader, presented publicly as a guarantor of stability during uncertain times. His presidency is characterized by choreographed elections, consolidation of surveillance systems, and careful balancing of elite patronage. Valesko married his university classmate, Elenya Marov, a retired educator; the couple has two children, both of whom hold mid-ranking posts in state-owned enterprises. Privately, supporters describe him as austere and earnest, rarely indulging in the luxuries typical of Karti’s elite class. He has spoken of losing his younger brother to a mining collapse in Almazar, a tragedy that hardened his mission to keep the state “unshaken by weakness.” Critics see him more as an architect of repression than a reformer, but in Karti his portrait appears prominently across rail stations, squares, and schools. He remains one of the longest-serving leaders in the country’s modern era.