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The journalist left after complications on March 3, on the 9th there will be a pilgrimage
That elite I used to think I was in is fictitious. You become an elite when you can touch people from anywhere, when you can grow both on top and underground.
These words are from Klara Marinova, one of the popular figures on the television screen and in the turbulent political life of the recent past, who passed away unexpectedly at the age of 71 on the night of March 3.
Radio K2, where Klara Marinova worked from 2008 until her last breath, was preparing a project with which the journalist could have an audio and video connection to interview politicians.
The radio project was necessary for her as she was in the process of a long recovery after several knee and joint surgeries. These operations are the reason why his broadcast on Bulgaria On Air – Q&A TV, in which he interviewed politicians and public figures, stopped almost half a year ago.
Leg problems, however
are getting worse
irrevocably
This is what Iliana Benovska, owner and manager of the media, told 24 Chasa. With great sadness he said: “My soul does not believe that Clara is dead. It was installed in 2008 on Radio K2, at its launch. Despite our political differences, I invited her to come see me. She came. An important person and an important politician. With a different political orientation than mine, but with high professionalism as a journalist.
Tonight (March 3) we completed a complex project to bring you audio and video on the Radio K2 YouTube channel so you can conduct your important interviews with politicians. Five minutes before I called her, I realized she was dead.
Clara, you are alive for Radio K2 “.
Although the television program was stopped, Marinova continued to work for Radio K2, where she was invited by Benovska, as she could not be a journalist anywhere else. This happened after the end of her term as a BSP deputy in the 37th National Assembly. To survive, she was forced to live in the village of Resilovo, where she was born on April 20, 1949, and to open a clothing store in Dupnitsa. Even then, however, he tried to do his job as a journalist and help local cable television.
Good evening, dear Sapareva Banya viewers, from me, Klara Marinova. Thus began the 30-minute transmissions of the cable “Factor TV” in 2003 in Sapareva Banya every day of the week at 6.30 pm. (i.e. image to text – ba). This is a television, the other is a radio ”, the journalist explained then to“ 24 Chasa ”.
This is the same Klara Marinova, a graduate of the Technical University and an international journalist at BNT for 10 years. And more: member of the Supreme Council (SC) of the BSP and of the Executive Bureau of the Supreme Council of the BSP, spokesman for the Supreme Council of the BSP, head of the party press center.
Also deputy of the BSP in the VII Supreme National Assembly, the National Assemblies 36 and 37, Vice President and President of the Radio, Television and BTA Commission in the 37th National Assembly, Secretary of the Parliamentary Group of the Democratic Left (PGDL) and head of the center press release of PGDL at the 37th National Assembly. He also wrote the grim media law that went down in history as the Clear Law.
But
after failure
In politics
it falls
in depression
Her favorite party kicked her out of Positano, and at BNT the then boss told her to leave. And crashed into a village. At first she grew flowers. Then came the television offer.
When he started organizing the news again, but at the local cable company, he was already living in the village of Resilovo, Dupnitsa region, and he was traveling 5-6 km every day to his place of work in Sapareva Banya. The owners invited her to the television channel. They even offered him a portion of their money. “I don’t have money. If I did, I would have invested them in Sapareva Banya,” she explains in her role as an employee. Her superiors at the time were a former midwife and a doctor who produced oil.
A year later, however, her owner cut her salary, angry that Klara Marinova had told 24 Chasa how dirty and cold she was in the so-called television studio. The other reason was that the journalist broadcast her interview with Sergei Stanishev, who was in Sapareva Banya in some cases. Unsatisfied with her salary, Clara leaves.
Still, he has to make a living. Thus, in 2004, she started selling Indian skirts and dresses at Dupnitsa’s Eurobazar store 53. “What a capitalist, now I’m a little street vendor,” Marinova said at the time. The products, in addition to Indian clothing and Bulgarian shirts, Italian and Turkish sweaters and leather jackets, bags, belts, scarves, necklaces, even “Japanese wind” (metal pipes that sound, blown by the wind), they are her former journalist pays 200 BGN monthly rent.
Most people think that this is some kind of sketch that I am playing. There are many reasons, not just financial. I hate doing nothing. Due to sheer politicking in Bulgarian professional circles, I was blocked from journalism. I opened them to tradeexplains Marinova.
These years have changed some of his political views and, although he remains on the left, he already believes that there should be independent candidates in parliament and a majority in all elected positions in our country.
However, the impossibility of being a journalist literally made her cry. “They took away my journalism and that’s why I became a salesperson.
I don’t think it was
the most harmful
journalist in
Bulgaria,
to whom all the doors of all the media should be closed ”. However, he proudly ignored the opportunity to look for work at a television station on his own. Don’t think they forgot me. They are not and if they need me, they will look for me.
And this happens when Iliana Benovska’s invitation to work at Radio K2 arrives. A little later there is a program on Bulgaria On Air.
That is why the locals have not seen her in her hometown of Resilovo for years. However, the courtyard of his house at the end of the village towards the mountain was always well cared for, which was taken care of by his neighbors.
The service will be on Tuesday, March 9 at 12 o’clock in the ritual hall of the Central Cemetery of Sofia.
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