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Sesvete (Croatian pronunciation:) is the easternmost city district of Zagreb, Croatia. Demographics. Historical population; Year Pop. ±% 1857: 1,047 ...
La Paz, officially Nuestra Señora de La Paz (Aymara: Chuqiyapu or Chuqi Yapu), is the seat of government of the Plurinational State of Bolivia. With 755,732 residents as of 2024, [ 4 ] [ 5 ] La Paz is the third-most populous city in Bolivia .
The 2003 La Paz riots, commonly referred to as Black February (Spanish: Febrero Negro), was a period of civil unrest in La Paz, Bolivia, that took place between 12 and 13 February 2003. The riots were instigated by the imposition of a progressive salary tax —dubbed the impuestazo —aimed at meeting the International Monetary Fund's goal of ...
La Paz: Editora Atenea S.R.L. Romero Ballivián, Salvador (2018). Quiroga Velasco, Camilo Sergio (ed.). Diccionario Biográfico de Parlamentarios 1979–2019 (in Spanish) (2nd ed.). La Paz: Fundación de Apoyo al Parlamento y la Participación Ciudadana; Fundación Konrad Adenauer. ISBN 978-99974-0-021-5
Sesvete can refer to one of the following: Sesvete, a district of the City of Zagreb, Croatia; Sesvete, Požega-Slavonia County, a village near Požega, Croatia;
العربية; تۆرکجه; Беларуская; Беларуская (тарашкевіца) Български; Català; Čeština; Cymraeg; Dansk; Deutsch
The new legislature covers 44,000m 2 with nine underground levels and twenty above-ground floors, allowing it to be seen from anywhere in La Paz and El Alto. It is topped by a cubic structure containing the hemicycle of the Chamber of Senators on levels fourteen and fifteen and the Chamber of Deputies on levels seventeen through twenty.
Telesistema Boliviano (TSB), the initial licensee, was founded on November 22, 1983, as the first commercial television company in Bolivia, [3] granting the license to operate in La Paz on channel 2. The channel was the opposite of ATB (channel 9) in some way, as the channel provided "quality programming" over political preferences.