The Grave Sin of Japan’s Media in Deifying the UN and UNESCO— The Reality of Bokova’s Family and Communist Privilege —
Through the work of Miroslav Marinov exposing Irina Bokova and UNESCO, this chapter reveals how Japanese media deified the UN and UNESCO, amplifying Chinese and Korean anti-Japan propaganda, while concealing the lineage of communist privilege behind Bokova.
Not only have Japan’s media continued to make the United Nations and UNESCO appear almost god-like in such a state, but they have also
2016-11-06
Simply reading the work of Miroslav Marinov is alone worth the 780 yen price of the December issue of Sound Argument.
However, upon seeing the reality of Irina Bokova and the reality of UNESCO that he revealed, anyone would inevitably ask what Japan’s media truly are.
Not only have they continued to portray the United Nations and UNESCO in such a state as if they were gods, but the lies and nonsense propaganda endlessly carried out by these people, namely the relentless attacks on Japan by China and South Korea, have been enthusiastically reported by them, and virtually all Japanese citizens have watched and read this reporting.
Japan’s media figures cannot be called journalists in any sense, and it is no exaggeration at all to say that they are traitors and enemies of the nation.
The following is a continuation of the previous chapter.
The education and career received by Bokova were largely due to her family’s belonging to the privileged class.
Bokova’s father, Georgi Bokov, was the editor-in-chief of the Communist Party’s official magazine, a central figure in propaganda activities, and had close ties with Todor Zhivkov, who ruled Bulgaria under a dictatorship from 1954 to 1989.
When the author was studying at Sofia University, there were occasions when he had to attend Bokov’s lectures.
He lacked the knowledge even to lecture at a university, nor did he assert any opinions of his own.
From beginning to end, his lectures consisted solely of praising Communist Party policies and were utterly boring.
I believe the students who had to listen to such talks were unfortunate.
Bokov began his activities as an anti-government guerrilla during the Second World War.
After the Soviet army invaded and occupied Bulgaria, Bokov’s career advanced at a breathtaking pace.
At the same time, during the war, he was not only involved in the killing of the renowned journalist and cartoonist Raiko Aleksiev for drawing satirical cartoons of Stalin, but also participated in executions by the People’s Court.
A repressive People’s Court, established by order of the Soviet Union, authorized the killing of thousands of politicians and intellectuals deemed to have collaborated with the fascist regime prior to 1944, and Bokov was also involved in these executions.
Under such a father, Bokova and her brother, Philip Bokov, grew up receiving limitless benefits granted to the privileged class.
They studied at an elite English-language school in the capital, Sofia, where only Communist Party elites were permitted to enroll.
Graduating in 1976 from the Moscow State Institute of International Relations, which trained future diplomats and was said to have close ties with the KGB, Bokova visited Western countries many times.
Furthermore, from 1982 to 1984, she was posted to New York as a representative of the Bulgarian government.
During this era, the movement of ordinary Bulgarians was strictly restricted.
Even to travel to neighboring countries within the communist bloc, one had to apply for a visa each time, and local police (militia) sometimes refused to grant permission to leave the country.
Whether one could depart depended entirely on the judgment of the militia, but Bokova never once experienced such inconveniences.
To be continued.
