Željka Markić
Željka Markić | |
---|---|
Born | Željka Živković 11 November 1964 |
Nationality | Croat |
Education | School of Medicine, University of Zagreb |
Organization(s) | U ime obitelji, Mary's Meals |
Spouse | Tihomir Markić |
Children | 4 |
Željka Markić (née Živković; born 11 November 1964) is a leader of Croatian right-wing movement U ime obitelji (In the Name of Family).[1]
She was born in Zagreb, then Yugoslavia, as the oldest of six children.[2] She attended Classical Gymnasium in Zagreb and graduated from School of Medicine at University of Zagreb.[3]
She worked as a war reporter during the Croatian War of Independence and later for BBC, NBC and RAI II.[3] She was editor of the Nova TV news programme from 2004 to 2007. She also edited television shows on Croatian Radiotelevision (HRT). Markić was a contributor to Human Right Watch from 1992 to 1994.[3]
She is the author of the few documentary films on BBC and Channel 4, such as Guy Smith, Correspondent and Unforgiving and co-director of documentary film Children of War together with Alan Raynolds.
She translated works of John Grisham, Antonio A. Borelli and Roy Gutman.[4]
She was the first president of the right-wing party Croatian Growth and founder of Croatian subsidiary of Mary's Meals organisation.
She is one of the key organisers of the 2013 Croatian constitutional referendum[5] for which civic initiative U ime obitelji (In the Name of Family) had collected 749,613 signatures.[6]
She is married to physician Tihomir Markić with whom she has four sons.[7]
Markić's opposition to LGBT rights has repeatedly drawn criticism in the media.[8][9] She has opposed Croatia's ratification of the Istanbul Convention on preventing violence against women and domestic violence.[10][11] She is also opposed to abortion and euthanasia.
References
[edit]- ^ Croatia Right-Wingers Provoke Bad Memories of 1941
- ^ Bradarić, Ivan. OBITELJ PRED NOVIM IZAZOVIMA Veritas. Access date 01-04-2018.
- ^ a b c Željka Markić Biografija.com. Published 12-02-2018. Access date 01-04-2018.
- ^ Markić, Željka - list of works and translations Catalogue of KGZ (Zagreb Public Libraries). Retrieved 01-04-2018.
- ^ Inicijativa U ime obitelji predala Saboru potpise Croatian Radiotelevision. Published 14-06-2013. Retrieved 01-04-2018.
- ^ SABOR: Inicijativa 'U ime obitelji' predala Saboru potpise i zahtjev za referendum PolitikaPlus. Published 14-06-2013. Retrieved 01-04-2018.
- ^ Ferina, Zrinka; Beck, Boris. Djeca nisu prepreka za karijeru Nacional. Published 27-04-2010. Retrieved 01-04-2018.
- ^ Pofuk, Branimir (17 November 2013). "Željka Markić ima pravo ako se složimo da smo životinje koje određuje način parenja". Večernji list (in Croatian). Retrieved 1 May 2018.
- ^ Jergović, Miljenko (19 November 2013). "MILJENKO JERGOVIĆ Iza Željke Markić ne stoje vjerska učenja, stoje razni poglavari". Jutarnji list. Retrieved 1 May 2018.
- ^ Vuković, Rozita; Turčin, Kristina (20 March 2018). "ZADNJI UDARAC KONZERVATIVNE FRONTE ISTANBULSKOJ KONVENCIJI Markić i udovice planiraju spriječiti glasanje o Istanbulskoj konvenciji u Saboru!". Jutarnji list. Retrieved 1 May 2018.
- ^ "Sarnavka i Markić burno raspravljale o Istanbulskoj konvenciji". Večernji list (in Croatian). 6 March 2018. Retrieved 1 May 2018.
- Living people
- Croatian women writers
- 1964 births
- Physicians from Zagreb
- Croatian anti-abortion activists
- Croatian anti-same-sex-marriage activists
- Croatian women activists
- Female critics of feminism
- Journalists from Zagreb
- Politicians from Zagreb
- Croatian Roman Catholics
- School of Medicine, University of Zagreb alumni
- Croatian translators
- English–Croatian translators
- Italian–Croatian translators