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The 2010 Ecuadorian crisis took place on 30 September 2010, when National Police operatives blockaded highways, occupied the National Assembly, blocked Mariscal Sucre International Airport in Quito [1] and José Joaquín de Olmedo International Airport in Guayaquil, [2] and took control of the premises of Ecuador TV, in what they claimed was a strike to oppose a government-sponsored law that ...
Radio Publica de Ecuador – 100.9 FM Pichincha (National Radio) CRE Satelital – 560 AM Quito; HCJB La Voz de los Andes – 690 AM, 6.05 SW, 89.3 FM Pichincha (Christian Radio) Radio Quito – 760 AM Quito; Radio Sucre – 700 AM Guayaquil; Radio Vision – 91.7 FM Quito / 107.7 FM Guayaquil; Radio EnergiaFm – www.energiafm.com.ec
The Sucre (Spanish pronunciation:) was the currency of Ecuador between 1884 and 2000. Its ISO code was ECS and it was subdivided into 10 decimos and 100 centavos . The sucre was named after Latin American political leader Antonio José de Sucre .
Carina Isabel Vance Mafla (born in 1977) is a former Minister for Public Health of Ecuador.Vance was born in Oakland, California. [1] She went to high school in Ecuador and attended university in the United States.
Ecuadorian centavo coins were introduced in 2000 when Ecuador converted its currency from the sucre to the U.S. dollar. [1] The coins are in denominations of 1, 5, 10, 25 and 50 centavos and are identical in size and value to their U.S. cent counterparts (although the U.S. 50-cent coin counterpart is not often seen in circulation).
A Siemens single side-band transmitter at Radio Station HCJB's international transmitter site in Pifo, Ecuador. 1990 - The first HC-100 (100,000-watt) transmitter goes on the air in Quito, Ecuador. Since that time eight more HC-100s were built and put into use by the World Radio Missionary Fellowship, Inc. in Ecuador, Swaziland and Australia.
The last image we have of Patrick Cagey is of his first moments as a free man. He has just walked out of a 30-day drug treatment center in Georgetown, Kentucky, dressed in gym clothes and carrying a Nike duffel bag.
Teleamazonas was created from the takeover of frequencies that belonged to HCJB-TV, owned by the HCJB radio ministry, in April 1972, to Antonio Granda Centeno. Experimental color broadcasts started in November 1973 under the new owner [1] and began regular broadcasts on February 22, 1974, as the first network with color television transmissions in Ecuador, positioning itself as the third ...