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El Observador (Montevideo) Digital edition; El País (Montevideo) Digital edition; La Diaria (Montevideo) Digital edition; La República (Montevideo) Digital edition; MercoPress (Montevideo) Digital edition; Últimas Noticias (Montevideo) Digital edition; El Telégrafo Digital edition
Former Embassy of Venezuela in Montevideo. Venezuela has an embassy in Montevideo. [1] Uruguay has an embassy in Caracas [2] and a consulate in Maracaibo. [3]In 29 of July of 2024, Venezuela announced a breakup of diplomatic relations with Uruguay, as because of the critical positioning of the uruguayan government about fraud reports that occurred in 2024 Venezuelan presidential election.
El Observador is a Uruguayan newspaper, published for the first time on 22 October 1991, and distributed nationwide. Its circulation is verified by the Argentine institution IVC. Its circulation is verified by the Argentine institution IVC.
La Diaria; Diario Oficial (Uruguay) O. El Observador (Uruguay) P. El País (Uruguay) R. La República (Uruguay) S. Semanario Hebreo This page was last edited on ...
El Observador Crole's first broadcast on November 16, 1953 with anchor Francisco Amado Pernía. Presented by the Creole Petroleum Corporation (a subsidiary of Standard Oil of New Jersey), El Observador Creole was Venezuela's first regular news program. The face and voice of Francisco Amado Pernía animated the newscasts from Monday to Saturday ...
El Observador, a Californian newspaper published in San Jose; El Observador, a Spanish newspaper published in Málaga; El Observador, a Uruguayan newspaper published in Montevideo; El Observador (Venezuelan TV program), a Venezuelan newscast of Radio Caracas Televisión; El Observador de la Realidad, a former Catalan newspaper
It broadcasts live from the Centro Nacional de Noticias (National Center for News), the same center where El Observador, RCTV's newscast, set is located. [1] [2] In the past, the program had been hosted by Anna Vaccarella and Luisana Ríos. [3] La Entrevista focuses on issues that have to do with national and international events. The program ...
The 2011 Uruguayan census revealed almost 1,000 people who declared Venezuela as their country of birth. [5] As of 2013, there were 62 Venezuelan citizens registered in the Uruguayan social security. [6] In 2015, more and more Venezuelans are coming to Uruguay, running away from their uncertain future; some ask for political asylum. [7]