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Comedy Central Extra (now Comedy Central Romania) 2017 Discovery World; ShortsTV; Sport.ro (now Pro Arena) Dolce Info (now Orange Info) Dolce Sport (now Orange Sport) 2018 Digi Film (now Film Now) Look Plus (now Prima Sport 1) 2019 MTV Romania; TVH Kids Channel; Nat Geo Wild (now National Geographic Wild) Realitatea TV; TVR HD; 2020 Megamax ...
PRO TV (Romanian pronunciation: [pro teˈve], often stylized as PRO•TV since 2017) is a Romanian free-to-air television network, launched on 1 December 1995 as the fourth private TV channel in the country (after TV SOTI, Antena 1, and the now-defunct, but online Tele7ABC).
Pro TV Internațional is a Romanian international television channel, owned by CME, which broadcasts the television programmes of Pro TV and its sister channels to Romanian audiences abroad in Romania, Moldova, Ukraine and Bulgaria.
Television in Romania started in August 1955. State television started to broadcast on 31 December 1956. State television started to broadcast on 31 December 1956. The second television channel followed in 1968, but between 1985 and 1990, there was only one Romanian channel before the return of the second channel.
Returned to his cell wrapped in a blanket, the victim often suffered from split eardrums and broken ribs, while blood flowed from his mouth and nose. According to prisoner accounts, most guards were Roma recruited from surrounding villages. [3] After 1967, the prison housed common, recidivist criminals under a harsh regime.
Bucharest is also home to Romania's supreme court, the High Court of Cassation and Justice, as well as to the Constitutional Court of Romania. Bucharest has a municipal police force, the Bucharest Police ( Poliția București ), which is responsible for policing crime within the whole city, and operates a number of divisions.
TVR2 was suspended in 1985, due to the "energy saving program" initiated by Nicolae Ceaușescu (1918–1989) and TVR1 became TVR again, becoming the only television station in Romania at the time, until the Romanian Revolution in 1989, corresponding with the fall of communism in the remaining Eastern Bloc countries that same year.
Banca di Roma, Bucharest Branch, had assets of £165.3 million at the end of 2005. [13] In August 2013, UniCredit Bank and RBD Romania announced the completion of the legal transfer of the Retail and Royal Preferred Banking Business of RBS (Bank) Romania S.A. towards UniCredit Bank S.A. and UniCredit Consumer Financing IFN S.A..