About the death of Eduard Bagirov on the Telegram channel reported Ilya Varlamov (recognized in the Russian Federation as a foreign agent).
Two sources from his circle said, “The author said that Eduard Bagirov died. According to one, the author was in a coma last week, all his organs were rejected. Bagirov was 47 years old.
— stated in the Varlamov News broadcast.
Telegram channel 112 clarifiesthat the author was hospitalized on April 1. According to the channel, he was in a coma last week – in the hospital, doctors provided the necessary assistance to the writer, but due to the severity of his condition, they were not able to save him.
Mash in order claimsBagirov himself came to one of the Moscow clinics on April 1: at the reception he was diagnosed with internal bleeding, and during his hospitalization he was diagnosed with cirrhosis of the liver.
Bagirov’s death was interpreted by his relatives and colleagues. Elizaveta Minaeva, wife of writer and broadcaster Sergei Minaev, on her Telegram WroteThat you trust Bagirov more than anyone else. He noted, however, that this is not always the case:
“For the first few years we were on the rocks all the time. They constantly fought on the most important and fundamental issues: is this girl beautiful? Has she had plastic surgery? I was offended and you were very angry. But then something changed and we suddenly began to understand each other, as only relatives understood. <…> I trusted you like a person trusts their loved one. I trusted my feelings when I got in a brand new Harley to drive through Sadovoye with you.
As a result, Minaeva wrote: “Someday we will meet somewhere in another world, I can imagine you surrounded by a crowd of beautiful girls “written in brilliant Russian”. Of course, you will immediately establish a comfortable infrastructure there.”
Sergey Minaev himself, who worked with Bagirov for a long time, is on the Telegram channel asked media representatives did not bother him and declined to comment. “My friend died. This only applies to his family,” he wrote.
Also the death of the author commented journalist Anton Krasovsky: “Eduard Bagirov is dead. Fierce, smart, loud, talented. Bye!”
life and destiny
Eduard Bagirov was born in Turkmenistan on October 25, 1975 and lived there until he came of age. He was enlisted with a soldier in Ashgabat and, in his own words, deserted after two months. Lives in Moscow since January 1994 and in the same year prisoner According to part 2 of Art. 144 “Theft” of the Criminal Code of the RSFSR served his sentence in a Russian prison. After serving his sentence, he went to his mother’s small hometown in the Nizhny Novgorod region, but soon returned to Moscow where he started trading. In 2001, he entered the Law Faculty of the Moscow Water Transport Academy and studied for a while.
In 2002, Bagirov and Minaev founded the literary portal litprom.ru, later Bagirov became its editor-in-chief. In 2007, Bagirov published the novel “Guest worker”, which tells about the adventures of a young man who came to conquer Moscow. According to the author, and as stated in the preface, the plot is partially based on real events in his life: the main character Yevgeny Aliev leaves Turkmenistan, flees from the Russian army, sits in prison for two years for theft of a railway. The station temporarily settles in the Russian town of Kulebyaki and tells about the metropolitan life and politics at the same time in Moscow, where he turned from an onion merchant to a successful entrepreneur after his trip to Moscow. Roman, “Glory to Russia!” It was announced under the slogan. and sold well: in the Moscow bookshop the book was among the 20 most popular, in the Biblio-Globus it took third place in sales among Russian fiction books.
Later, Bagirov released the novel Lovers (2008), Idealist (2010), set up a script bureau, and himself wrote several scripts for a full meter. He also acted as a confidant of presidential candidate Vladimir Putin in the 2012 elections. In 2022, she hosted the author’s program “Bagirov Against” on Radio Sputnik.
But Baghirov is also known as an internet personality thanks to his LiveJournal blog. For example, he described situationAppeared when buying a ticket for the St. Petersburg Philharmonic.
“What a deep, dull, terrible, miserable territory this damn Peter is. Here I ordered two tickets with delivery to the traditional April concert of Grigory Sokolov at the St. Petersburg Philharmonic Orchestra. <…> They painstakingly wrote down booty from me, and suddenly, a few minutes later, from this damn office, St. I got an SMS saying “you have to show up to buy a ticket” to a crappy vault in St. Petersburg. in St. Petersburg! I almost howled. <…>
They call themselves the cultural capitals, and on the third day they swallowed tooth powder themselves. I would burn it with my own hands. Live. Or he would set up another blockade so that, again, instead of bread, they would eat casein glue and gnaw lime from the walls,” he wrote.
In 2009, in connection with a series of anti-Russian statements by Bagirov, representatives of the Movement Against Illegal Immigration (an organization banned in Russia) (DPNI) wrote a statement against him. Baghirov then wrote an open letter to the then Minister of Internal Affairs, Rashid Nurgaliyev.
Rashid Gumarovich. You won’t get anything. For me, he is a public figure with an active civilian position who has given several years of his life to destroy the fascist-oriented Russian extremists, who has more than once seriously risked that life, repeatedly attacked, engaged in arson, and lived in a perpetual atmosphere. threats to personal safety and life – it is not possible to sew article 282. <…> Not to mention the fact that you won’t be able to wash this stigma for the rest of your life. And I’ve seen your personal complaints about a well-known male genitalia. <…> The finale of this game is sometimes unpredictable,” wrote Bagirov.
In 2012, on the talk show “Clip” dedicated to the national question, Bagirov had a conflict with Alexander Belov-Potkin. Bagirov pointed out that Potkin “managed to lead the Russian nationalist movement with such a name”. Then, after a series of mutual insults, a brawl broke out between them for three seconds.
Also in March 2012, Bagirov and Minaev defeated GQ political commentator Andrey Ryvkin for criticizing literary websites. Then Ryvkin said socialbites.ca said that an unknown person called him and introduced himself as an Interfax employee and invited him for an interview. When Ryvkin arrived at the agency building, “Minaev and Bagirov jumped on him and began beating him.” According to the journalist, OMON officers, who were passing nearby, stopped the fight first, but Minaev and Bagirov showed them some documents and the policemen left. Ryvkin noted that while he was being beaten, he was told that “next time they would beat him to death”.
Also, against the background of similar statements, Bagirov had a conflict with the Russian nationalist Maxim Martsinkevich (Tesak). Before filming on one of the federal channels, Tesak came to Bagirov’s dressing room with a request to explain himself for broadcasting in LiveJournal. Bagirov tried to leave the building several times, but Martsinkevich did not let him go.
In addition, Bagirov was sentenced to five years in absentia in Moldova. According to investigators, in 2009, before and after the parliamentary elections in the republic, Baghirov wrote a number of provocative materials, which later led to riots. It was alleged that the author “as a blogger and writer actively infiltrated the social circle and used technologies of mass manipulation, took an active part in the development and implementation of provocative measures aimed at undermining the pre- and post-election process.” He was arrested in 2011 and was asked to testify against one of the opposition lawmakers. Bagirov was released after a hunger strike, a protest by the Russian embassy in Chisinau, and actions by the State Duma.