Participants

Erhard Busek
Dr. Busek (born 25 March, 1941, in Vienna, Austria) was chairman of the Christian-conservative People‘s Party (ÖVP) and Vice-Chancellor of Austria between 1991 and 1995. He received his law degree from the University of Vienna in 1963. During his studies, he also served as Chairman of the Austrian Youth Council. He began his professional career in 1964 as legal adviser to the association of the parliamentarians of the Austrian People’s Party. He then served as Secretary General of the Austrian Federation for Trade and Commerce (1968-1975). In 1975 he was appointed Secretary General of the Austrian People’s Party and was elected Member of Parliament later that year. Erhard Busek gained additional experience in administration between 1968-1976 while with a publishing firm in the economic field. In 1976 Mr. Busek entered municipal politics. He was City Councillor and was elected Deputy-Mayor of Vienna in 1978, a position he held until 1987. He was appointed Minister for Science and Research in April 1989. From 1994 until May 1995, Mr. Busek was Minister for Education. He was elected Chairman of the Austrian People’s Party in 1991 and served as Vice-Chancellor of Austria from 1991 to 1995. In early 2000, Erhard Busek was appointed Special Representative of the Austrian Government on EU Enlargement. He served in that position until December 2001. Since January 2002, Mr. Busek has been serving as Special Co-ordinator of the Stability Pact for South Eastern Europe. Furthermore, he is the Coordinator of the Southeast European Cooperative Initiative (SECI); Chairman of the “Institute for the Danube Region and Central Europe” and President of the European Forum Alpbach. He is also Chairman of the Board of Trustees of ERSTE Foundation.
Milica Delevic
Milica Delevic is Serbia’s Assistant Foreign Minister in charge of European Integration. She was born in Belgrade in 1969. She is a senior lecturer in the foreign policy of Serbia and Montenegro at the Faculty of Political Sciences at the University of Belgrade. She studied at the University of Belgrade (BA), the Central European University (MA) and the University of Kent in Canterbury (doctorate). She worked as assistant director of the Diplomatic Academy of the Ministry of Foreign Affairs of Serbia and Montenegro, director of the Office of Serbia and Montenegro for membership of the EU and coordinator for the drafting of the Serbian National Strategy for entry into the EU.
Slavenka Drakulic
Slavenka Drakulic was born in Rijeka, Croatia, in 1949. She graduated in comparative literature and sociology from the University in Zagreb. The author of several works of nonfiction and novels, she has written for The New York Times, The Nation, The New Republic, and numerous publications around the world; and published three books of journalism (How We Survived Communism and Even Laughed, Rain Express, Café Europa), four novels (Holograms Of Fear, Marble Skin, The Taste of a Man, As If I Am Not Here) and most recently They would never hurt a fly. War criminals on trial in The Hague. Her books have been translated into more than fifteen languages, her reports and essays published in major European and American newspapers and magazines. As a freelance journalist and writer she currently lives in Stockholm, Sweden.
Alexandra Föderl-Schmid
Alexandra Föderl-Schmid (born 1971 in Haslach, Austria), is editor-in-chief of the Austrian daily Der Standard. The first woman in Austrian history to have held such a post, she previously reported extensively on European issues, including the wars in former Yugoslavia and EU enlargement. She is a graduate of the Wels Journalism School and gained her master’s degree at the University of Salzburg followed by a doctorate in Communications Studies, also from the University of Salzburg. She has reported extensively on European issues, mainly from a base in Germany.
Alfred Gusenbauer
Dr. Alfred Gusenbauer (born 8 February, 1960) has been Chancellor of Austria since January 2007 and the leader of the Social Democratic Party of Austria (SPÖ) since 2000. Mr. Gusenbauer was born in Sankt Pölten in Lower Austria. He studied political science, philosophy and jurisprudence at the University of Vienna, where he gained a doctorate in political science. He was a senior research fellow in the economic policy department of the Lower Austrian Chamber of Labour from 1990 to 1999. Mr. Gusenbauer was federal leader of the SPÖ youth wing, the Socialist Youth (SJ) from 1984 to 1990, vice-president of the Socialist Youth International (IUSY) from 1985 to 1989 and vice-president of the Socialist International in 1989. In 1991 Mr. Gusenbauer was elected SPÖ chairman in Ybbs an der Donau and a member of the Lower Austria party executive. In the same year, he was elected to the Bundesrat, the upper house of the Austrian Parliament, as a Deputy for Lower Austria. He was a member of the Austrian delegation to the parliamentary meeting of the Council of Europe in 1991 and was Chairman of the Social Committee of the Council of Europe from 1995 to 1998. In the Bundesrat, Gusenbauer was Chairman of the Committee for Development Co-operation from 1996 to 1999. In 2000 he was elected leader of the SPÖ Group in the Bundesrat and also Secretary-General of the SPÖ.
Gordana Igric
Gordana Igric began her career as a journalist in Belgrade in 1981. She reported from Bosnia and Kosovo during the wars that followed the dissolution of former Yugoslavia and returned there to research and document war crimes. She has received several journalism awards such as the 1998 Overseas Press Club (USA) Award for Human Rights Reporting and a Human Rights Watch, HRW, award in the same year for her research into war crimes in Foca, Bosnia & Herzegovina. She was Balkan project manager at the Institute of War and Peace Reporting, IWPR, from 1999 until August 2005, during which time IWPR‘s Balkan reporting received numerous press awards and media citations. She is the founder of the Balkan Investigative Reporting Network, BIRN, and currently serves as the Regional Network Director.
Tim Judah
Tim Judah is a journalist and author who lives in London and specialises in Balkan affairs. He is the author of two books on the Balkans: The Serbs: History, Myth and the Destruction of Yugoslavia and Kosovo: War & Revenge. He is currently writing an “all you need to know” book about Kosovo. From 1990 to 1991, he lived in Bucharest and covered the aftermath of Communism in Romania and Bulgaria for The Times and The Economist. After that he moved to Belgrade for both publications in order to cover the war in Yugoslavia. He moved back to London in 1995 but continues to travel frequently to the region. He writes almost all the coverage of the former Yugoslavia for The Economist and has also written about the region for the New York Review of Books. Since 11 September 2001, he has also covered other parts of the world for them, and for others. These have included Afghanistan, Iraq, North Korea and Darfur. On Kosovo and the Balkans he is a frequent contributor to specialist publications such as Strategic Comments of London’s International Institute for Strategic Studies and Balkan Insight. He is frequently invited to brief institutes, diplomats and businesses on Balkan issues. Recently he has done so in Brussels, Oslo, Ottawa, Paris, Sofia and Washington. Last November he was in Georgia for The Economist, including Abkhazia and South Ossetia.
Gerald Knaus
Gerald Knaus has been the founding Director of the European Stability Initiative since 1999. He grew up in Vienna and studied at Oxford University, the Institut d’Etudes Européennes at the University of Brussels and at the Johns Hopkins University Bologna Centre. He taught macroeconomics and international political economy at the State University of Chernivtsi (Ukraine). He worked for five years in Bulgaria and Bosnia-Herzegovina (including the International Crisis Group, the Office of the High Representative and as advisor to the International Mediator). He was also director (2001 to 2004) of the Lessons Learned Unit of the EU Pillar of the UN Mission in Kosovo. Gerald Knaus has written a book on Bulgaria (1997) and (co)authored numerous articles and papers that have triggered public debates, including Travails of the European Raj on Bosnia (Journal of Democracy, 2003) and Member State Building and the Helsinki Moment on the EU (2004).
He has been responsible for the writing and publication of some 60 ESI reports since 1999. Gerald Knaus is an advisor to ERSTE Foundation in Vienna. He is a founding member of the European Council on Foreign Relations. He also sits on the advisory boards of the European Policy Centre (Brussels) and of the Black Sea Trust for Democracy. Since 2004 he is based in Istanbul.
Ivan Krastev
Ivan Krastev is a political scientist and Chairman of the Centre for Liberal Strategies in Sofia, Bulgaria. He is a founding member and member of the Board of the European Council on Foreign Relations (www.ecfr.eu) and member of the Trilateral Commission. He is an Open Society Fellow and the academic director of the Open Century Project of the Central European University in Budapest. In the last decade, he has been a visiting fellow at St. Anthony College, Oxford; Woodrow Wilson Center for International Scholars in Washington; Collegium Budapest; Wissenschaftskolleg, Berlin; Institute of Federalism, University of Fribourg, Switzerland; Institute for Human Sciences, Vienna; Central European University, Budapest and Remarque Institute, New York University. Ivan Krastev was the executive director of the International Commission on the Balkans installed by the Robert Bosch Stiftung, German Marshal Fund of the United States, Charles Stewart Mott Foundation and King Baudouin Foundation chaired by former Italian Premier Minister Giuliano Amato (www.balkan-commission.org). Among his publications in English are: The Anti-American Century, eds. Alan McPpherson and Ivan Krastev, CEU Press, 2007; Shifting Obsessions. Three Essays on Politics of Anti-Corruption., CEU Press, 2004; Nationalism after Communism, Lessons Learned, eds. Allina Pippidi and Ivan Krastev, CEU Press, 2004. Ivan Krastev is a contributor to the op-ed pages to a number of leading European newspapers such as Le Monde, The Wall Street Journal, Financial Times Deutschland, Frankfurter Allgemeine Zeitung, Gazetta Wyborczha, Dziennik, Vedomosti. His articles have also been published in Journal of Democracy, Prospect magazine, Russia in Global Affairs, Pro&Contra, and Europe’s Word. He is a regular
contributor to OpenDemocracy.net. Ivan Krastev is the editor in chief of the Bulgarian Edition of Foreign Policy.
Boris Marte
Boris Marte is a member of the tranzit international board and has been Director of Corporate Sponsoring, Erste Bank Group, since 2001. Before that he held various positions in the fields of politics and cultural politics, among others with Erhard Busek and Peter Marboe. From 1997 until 2000, he was responsible for the project management of the installation of the Holocaust Monument (Rachel Whiteread) in the city of Vienna. In 1999 he published the book Die Neue Ordnung des Politischen – Die Herausforderungen der Demokratie im 21. Jahrhundert (Campus Verlag, Frankfurt/ New York). Since 2003, Boris Marte is Managing Director of ERSTE Foundation.
Michael Martens
Born in Hamburg in 1973, Michael Martens grew up in Hamburg and the Lüneburg Heath. As a pupil, he regularly worked for the German newspapers Allgemeine Zeitung der Lüneburger Heide, Neue Osnabrücker Zeitung and Lübecker Nachrichten. Having spent one year at a high school in Chicago, and following his graduation, he worked as an editor of newspapers for Russia’s German minority (“Russlanddeutsche”) from 1995 until 2000, in a project financed by the Federal Foreign Office. Michael Martens spent about one year each in Bishkek (where he edited the Zeitung der Deutschen Kyrgyztans), in Almaty, the former capital of Kazakhstan, and in Kiev. He last worked for St. Petersburgische Zeitung, which was founded in 1727, for two years. Michael Martens has travelled to Central Asia, Pakistan, Afghanistan, many regions in Ukraine and some areas of Russia. His reports about these travels have been published in Switzerland’s Neue Zürcher (feuilleton section) and Germany’s Frankfurter Allgemeine Zeitung (“Reiseblatt”). In 2001, Michael Martens joined the newsroom of Frankfurter Allgemeine Zeitung, where he continued to report about events in CIS and Afghanistan. During the American war against the Taliban, he covered news from Afghanistan, and in the summer of 2002 moved to Belgrade, where he has been correspondent responsible for postwar coverage from the Balkans.
Hedvig Morvai-Horvat
Hedvig Morvai-Horvat is executive director of the European Fund for the Balkans, a multi-year joint initiative of the European foundations Compagnia di San Paolo, ERSTE Foundation, King Baudouin Foundation and Robert Bosch Stiftung designed to help these foundations to become more actively involved in the Western Balkans and to prepare the societies and countries of the region for their future in the EU. She started her long engagement as civil activist as founder and vice president of the Hungarian Student Association of Vojvodina in 1997, which was later followed by her engagement in different Serbian non-governmental organisations: the Student Union of Serbia, the Novi Sad based Center for Multiculturalism, coordination of the office of Carpathian Information Exchange Network – AGORA, later the Novi Sad office of Partnership for Democratic Change and engagement in the EXIT Festival team. From 2002 until July 2007, she was director of The Citizens’ Pact for South Eastern Europe, a regional initiative focusing on cross-border and regional cooperation of local communities and NGOs in South Eastern Europe. During her service, The Citizens’ Pact became one of the most relevant regional actors dealing with issues such as visa regimes, local democracy and cross-border co-operation development and youth participation. As social programme adviser to the EXIT festival, the largest music festival of the Balkans, Hedvig Morvai-Horvat and the Citizens’ Pact team established the MOVE! Festival Stage that serves as the central festival scene for social and alternative cultural programmes. Hedvig Morvai-Horvat studied law in Novi Sad and Belgrade and attended numerous courses and alternative education programmes. She is an alumnus of the Belgrade Fund for Political Excellence. In 2006 she was awarded by the Belgrade-based Maja Maršiæeviæ-Tasiæ Foundation with the “Osvajanje slobode“ (freely translated: Winning Freedom) award.
Ursula Plassnik
Dr. Ursula Plassnik (born 23 May, 1956, in Klagenfurt) is an Austrian diplomat and politician. She has been Foreign Minister of Austria since October 2004. From 1971 to 1972, she was an exchange student in Middleburg, Virginia, United States. She received a Juris Doctor law degree from the University of Vienna in 1977 and a postgraduate diploma from the Collège d’Europe, Bruges, Belgium. In the following years, she worked in different positions in the Austrian Ministry for Foreign Affairs. On 1 July, 1997, she became cabinet chief of the Austrian Vice Chancellor, a position she held until 15 January, 2004, when she became Austria‘s ambassador to Switzerland. She was appointed Foreign Minister on 18 October, 2004. She joined the Austrian People‘s Party after receiving the offer to become foreign minister.
Edi Rama
Edi Rama (born in 1964) is an Albanian politician and artist. Since October 2000 he has been the mayor of Tirana, Albania’s capital. Rama was active during the anti-Communist revolution, while being a professor at the Academy of Arts of Tirana. In 1992 he co-authored an anti-Communist book called Refleksione (Reflections). The book condemned Enver Hoxha‘s regime and provided insight into emigration and economics of Albania. With the advent of democracy and the multi-party system, Rama became involved in party politics while following his career as an internationally recognised visual artist. After being severely beaten up in 1997, followed by a long recovery, he immigrated to Paris. When he returned to Albania for his father‘s funeral in 1998, Fatos Nano asked him into his government as Minister of Culture, Youth and Sports. As Minister, some of his first steps were the opening of movie theatres to show Hollywood movies in order to help overcome people‘s mental isolation from the rest of the world. Then in 2000, Rama ran as an independent candidate in the Tirana mayor race, but always with the support of the Socialist Party of Albania. He won 57% of the votes. Shortly after his election, Edi Rama‘s house came under fire from an unknown gunman on 9 November, 2000, but Rama escaped the assassination attempt unscathed. In the 2003 elections, Rama was able to win another mandate. At the same time, he began to get more involved in political life of the Socialist Party of Albania. In December of 2003 he became member of the Socialist Party.
Albert Rohan
Albert Rohan was born in 1936 in Melk/Lower Austria. In 1960 he earned a LL D in Law. In 1963 he joined the Federal Ministry for Foreign Affairs, followed by the Embassies in Belgrade and London, Mr. Rohan was Austrian Ambassador in Argentine, Uruguay, Paraguay and later Director in the Cabinet of the Secretary General of the United Nations, New York. From 1996-2001, he has been Secretary General for Foreign Affairs. Mr. Rohan is a frequent commentator on foreign affairs in print media, radio and television, a Member of international think tanks and Rapporteur of the Independent Commission on Turkey. In 2005 he became Deputy Special Envoy of the UN Secretary General for the Future Status Talks of Kosovo. Albert Rohan is founding member of the European Council on Foreign Relations (2007) and author of the book Diplomat on the Fringes of World Politics, Molden, October 2002.
Wolfgang Ruttenstorfer
Born in 1950, Wolfgang Ruttenstorfer received his doctorate at the University of Economics and Business Administration in Vienna and started to work with OMV in 1976. In 1985 he joined the Planning and Controlling Department and in 1989 he took responsibility for the Strategic Development of the Group. After being appointed Head of Marketing in 1990, he joined the Executive Board in 1992 and was responsible for Finance and Chemicals. He remained in the Board until the beginning of 1997, when he became Deputy Minister of Finance. On 1 January, 2000, he rejoined the OMV Executive Board being responsible for Finance and Natural Gas Business. As of 1 January, 2002, he has been CEO and Chairman of the Executive Board.
Elisa Spiropali
Elisa Spiropali holds a B.A. in Politics and Economics from Mount Holyoke College, Massachusetts, USA. She is pursuing a Master‘s in Contemporary European Politics at the University of Sussex, UK. Elisa Spiropali is very interested in contemporary political ideas and economic development, particularly in the struggle of individuals and groups in marginalized societies (and countries) for survival, freedom and progress. Right after graduating she worked for Lansner & Kubitschek, a public interest law firm in New York practicing in civil rights law and foster care reform, offering legal services and representation to poor communities. She has also worked as an analyst for the Kosovo Stability Initiative, a successful local think tank in Priština. During her study abroad in Argentina in 2004, she worked as a human rights researcher for the Center for Social and Legal Studies in Buenos Aires, conducting first-hand interviews with survivors of the dictatorship (1976-1983) and doing research to compile a material collection of stories for future social action. She joined MJAFT! in 2006 and contributed as the Policy Coordinator. Currently, she is the MJAFT! Movement‘s Policy Director.
Martin Traxl
Martin Traxl was born in the Austrian province of Carinthia, he studied journalism and theatre arts, and has been working for the ORF since 1985. He gathered his first experiences as a journalist in the Aktueller Dienst programme of the Carinthian ORF studio. In 1987, Traxl became a permanent member of the radio arts section in Vienna, where he contributed to programmes such as “Morgenjournal“, “Mittagsjournal“, „Kultur aktuell“, and „Ö1 danach“. Moreover, he helped develop the arts section of the Ö3 radio station, presented the theatre programme “Im Rampenlicht“ reshaped by himself, and was editor in chief in the arts section. In 1993 he was responsible for the development of the daily culture magazine “Leporello“. Traxl made a name for himself in Germany as a correspondent for SFB, NDR, BR, and RIAS Berlin. Moreover, he was a member of the jury for several federal and state awards. From March 1995 until 1997, Traxl was the arts presenter of the “ZiB 1“ daily news programme, and prepared TV reports for the weekly Programmes ”Treffpunkt Kultur“ and “Am Schauplatz“. Traxl presented the “ZiB 1“ from January 1998 to October 2002. In January 1999, he was appointed director of culture information and culture magazines in the main arts department of the television section. In October 2005, He changed to the Central Programme Services department, where he was responsible for programme coordination for 3sat. He has been head of the cultural department at ORF television since January 2007. Martin Traxl is responsible for the documentary series “Balkan Express” at ORF.
Andreas Treichl
Andreas Treichl was born in 1952 in Vienna. After studying economic sciences at Vienna University from 1971 to 1975, he went to New York, where he was responsible for Corporate Finance at Chase Manhattan Bank from 1977-1983. He entered Die Erste österreichische Spar-Casse in 1983 as Key Account Manager. In 1986, Mr. Treichl became CEO of Chase Manhattan Bank Austria and, in 1993, CEO of Crédit Lyonnais Austria. From 1994 to 1997, he was member of the Managing Board of Die Erste österreichische Spar-Casse Bank AG. Since July 1997, he has been CEO and Chairman of the Managing Board of Die Erste österreichische Spar-Casse Bank AG, now Erste Bank. Since 2003, he has also been Chairman of the Managing Board of ERSTE Foundation, the major shareholder of Erste Bank.
Ivan Vejvoda
Born in Belgrade in 1949, Ivan Vejvoda graduated in political science in Paris at the Institut d’etudes politiques. He did post graduate studies at the Faculty of Philosophy, Belgrade University. Ivan Vejvoda has been Executive Director of the Balkan Trust for Democracy (a project of the German Marshall Fund of the United States) since June 2003. He was Senior Foreign Policy Adviser to the Prime Minister of Serbia in 2002-2003. From 1998-2002 he was Director of the Soros Foundation in Belgrade. A political scientist, he worked at the Institute for European Studies in Belgrade (1984-1993) and has taught European studies, comparative politics and political theory at the University of Sussex (1993-96), Macalester College, Minnesota (1996-97) and Smith College, Massachusetts (1997-98). In the 1980s, he was an editorial board member of the Belgrade journals Theoria and Knjizevnost, and is on the editorial boards of the US social science journals Constellations and Philosophy and Social Criticism. He has been co-editor of a books series on political philosophy “Libertas” with the Belgrade publishing house Filip Visnjic since 1984. He has co-edited Democratization in Central and Eastern Europe (Pinter 2000, Continuum 2002) and Yugoslavia and After (Longman 1997). He has also written on the French revolution, La Boetie, Hannah Arendt, Claude Lefort. He has translated books and articles from English, French and Italian by authors such as Jean Jacques Rousseau, Jacques Derrida, Lucio Colletti, Agnes Heller, Cornelius Castoriadis. He was a co-founder of the Democratic Forum in Belgrade (1989) and of the Belgrade Circle of Independent Intellectuals (1992). Ivan Vejvoda is also member of the Board of Trustees of ERSTE Foundation.
Erion Veliaj
Erion Veliaj headed the MJAFT! Movement from 2003-2007, Albania‘s leading watchdog and civil society pressure group and recipient of the 2004 UN Civil society award. He has worked for many international organisations and UN agencies, the US Department of State, OSCE, the Council of Europe and the Open Society Institute. He is a member of the Board of Directors of the Balkan Children and Youth Foundation and several regional philanthropies and think tanks. Erion Veliaj graduated from Grand Valley State University, USA and received his M.A. in European Politics from the University of Sussex, UK. Prior to that, he worked in the Balkans, Caucasus, Central and South America and East Africa. He is a frequent speaker on Albania and the Balkans in the European Parliament, US Congress, as well as other fora and university campuses. He currently works as an analyst for the European Stability Initiative (ESI), doing research on Moldova and Romania.
Eleonora Veninova
Eleonora Veninova is a journalist for the BBC Macedonian section. Prior to that, she worked for Sitel TV, a national Macedonian channel, covering social and youth issues. Additionally, she works for Cre8ive 8 Production, producing documentaries and short promotional clips for the British Council, including an exclusive interview with HRH Prince Edward in 2006. She won the “Make a difference” award from UNICEF for a one-minute clip, presented in New York in 2005. In 2007 she was chosen a fellow with the Balkan Fellowship for Journalistic Excellence, a programme initiated by the ERSTE Foundation and Robert Bosch Stiftung.
Alida Vracic
Alida Vracic is Director of Populari, a think tank in Sarajevo, Bosnia and Herzegovina. She previously worked as a researcher for the European Stability Initiative (ESI). She holds a M.Sc. in International public policy from the University College London and a B.A. from Sarajevo Law Faculty, specialising in criminal law, human rights and the Dayton Peace Agreement. Prior to joining ESI, Alida Vracic completed her studies on criminal proceedings and the penal system in Austria. She managed several projects in the Balkans for the Human Rights Centre of the University of Sarajevo and for the Spanish Institutional Programme. In Bosnia she acted as ESI liaison officer and conducted research on judicial reforms efforts for the ESI Bosnia Project.
Alexander Wrabetz
Dr. Alexander Wrabetz, born in 1960 in Vienna, is Director-General of the Austrian Broadcasting Corporation, Österreichischer Rundfunk (ORF) since 2007. He studied law in Vienna and worked as a free lancer for ORF regional studio Vienna. After his doctorate and a practice in court as legal trainee in 1983, he joined from 1984 to 1987 the trainee programme in the head office and bank of the Austrian savings banks, becoming Group Head Trade Finance. From 1987 to 1992, Mr. Wrabetz was assistant to the Chairman of the Executive Board of Österreichische Industrieholding AG, in 1989 granted general commercial power of representation. In 1990 he has become Secretary-General of Austrian Industries/ÖIAG and Member of the supervisory boards of several companies within the ÖIAG. Other milestones of his career: 1992-1994 Managing Director of Voest Alpine Intertrading Ges.m.b.H. Linz, 1995-1998 Managing Director of Vamed Engineering GmbH & Co KG, Planungs- und Errichtungsges. m.b.H., Vienna and member of the Executive Board of VAMED AG, Vienna, 1995-1998 member of the Board of Trustees of Österreichischer Rundfunk. From 1998 until 2006 he has been Commerical Director of Österreichischer Rundfunk, Chairman of the Supervisory Board of ORF-Enterprise GmbH & Co KG, Chairman of the Supervisory Board of Österreichische Rundfunksender GmbH & Co KG, Chairman of the Supervisory Board of Gebühren Info Service GmbH and Managing Director of TW1 Betriebsführungs GmbH.
