Who's Kolinda? The president who likes a fascist who speaks seven languages

Kolinda Grabar -Kitarovic received the attention of many football fans for the strong support he gave to Croatia's national, which managed to make it to the World Cup final “Russia 201818x1>, writes Periscopi. Kolinda at the match in front of Denmark, in which Croatia won only after the penalty, had gone to the strip store to [...]
Kolinda Grabar -Kitarovic received the attention of many football fans for the strong support he gave to Croatia's national, which managed to make it to the World Cup final “Russia 201818x1>, writes Periscopi.
Kolinda in the match in front of Denmark, in which Croatia won only after the penalty, had gone to the strippers to meet and embrace Croatian players who were half naked.
But who really is Kolinda?
She is Croatia's first woman president since 2015. In November 2014, she ran for presidents with little chance before Ivo Josipovic, who was expected to win over 50% of the vote and finish the race in the first round. Grabar-Kitarovic, however, came in second and in the next round managed to defeat Josipovic by 1,48% different.
In 2017 by Forbes, Grabar The 39th most powerful woman in the world.
She was born 29 April of 1968 in Rijeka, Croatia. She was raised by her parents, Dubravka and Branko Grabar, in the village of Lopaqa parents in northern Rijeka.
Grabar as 17 years old in the student exchange program to study in Los Alamos, New Mexico, graduating in 1986.
After her return to Yugoslavia, she attended the Faculty of Human and Social Sciences at Zagreb University, graduating in 1993.
All in all, in December 2015, she went to her doctoral study in international relations at the Zagreb Faculty of Political Sciences.
Some attitudes briefly:
Although against marriage of the same gender, Grabar-Kitarovic expressed her support for the Life Partnership Act, in which he allowed couples of the same gender to enjoy the same rights as heterosexual ones, praising such a thing as a good compromise.
Grabar guitarovic is in favour of abortion. She has considered the prohibition on abortion to be of no choice.
Kolinda married James Chitarovitch. It is Catholic and devoted to traditional Christian values.
In an interview for Radio Narodni, Kolinda has declared the favourite singer to be nationalist Marko Perkoviq, who is accused of promoting extreme nationalism and for deregulating fascism.
It speaks fluent Croatian, English, Spanish, and Portuguese, while it also understands German, French, and Italian.
Finally, the political elite in Croatia, part of which for nearly three decades is also Kolinda, was becoming popular with the cause of major unemployment, mass migration, corruption and the stable economy that could be added to its worldwide performances, hugs and Croatia's arrival in the finals. /Periscopi












