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Ojo was founded on March 14, 1968, as a morning newspaper in Lima. [1] Its founder was the businessman Luis Banchero Rossi, who had already founded the newspaper chain Correo, under the leadership of the Empresa Periodística Nacional SA (Epensa).
In 2012, the official website of Perú.21 was briefly blocked by the Government of Peru after it had published an article criticizing the government's budget management. [3] A few months later, a former journalist who had earlier worked for Perú.21 was arrested and imprisoned for hacking into the email accounts of government officials. [4]
El Comercio is a Peruvian newspaper based in Lima.Founded in 1839, it is the oldest newspaper in Peru and one of the oldest Spanish-language papers in the world. It has a daily circulation of more than 120,000.
Diario 16 (Spanish for "Daily 16" or "Newspaper 16") is a Spanish-language online newspaper published in Madrid, Spain, since 2015. [2] It is considered a follow-up of the namesake defunct newspaper ; [ 3 ] its new motto is "El diario de la Segunda Transición" (Spanish for "The newspaper of the Second Transition").
Since the existence of radio in Peru, it has been a popular source of information due to its ease of access. [1] Many radio stations exist throughout Peru, including Radio Programas del Perú. The history of radio in Peru can be categorized into the first historical period of (1925-1936) when radio transformed from an elite medium to a mass media.
La República (Spanish: [la reˈpuβlika] ⓘ) is a Peruvian newspaper based in Lima, Peru. It is one of the two main national daily newspapers sold all over the country since it was founded on November 16, 1981.
Aja then experiences a series of wide-ranging adventures around the world, initially in an IKEA wardrobe to London, England, then a Louis Vuitton suitcase to Rome, Italy, and a hot air balloon to a ship heading to Tripoli, Libya. In the ship, he gets robbed the money he earned by selling the shirt on which he wrote an emotional incident from ...
Worth a Peru (Spanish: Vale un Perú) is a Spanish language phrase which has come to symbolize a matter of great value. [1] The term originated in the colonial times of the Viceroyalty of Peru, and is still used in various parts of Latin America. Spanish colonists created the phrase in order to describe the depths of Peru's riches. [2]