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La Paz: Country: Bolivia: Website: www.la-razon.com: Media of Bolivia; List of newspapers; La Razón is a Bolivian daily newspaper published in La Paz. [1]
El Deber (Santa Cruz de la Sierra) El Día; El Diario — began publication 5 April 1904; oldest currently in circulation [1] La Estrella de Oriente (Santa Cruz de la Sierra) Hoy; Jornada — began publication February 1948 [1] La Misión; El Mundo (Santa Cruz de la Sierra) El Nacional ; El Nuevo Día (Santa Cruz de la Sierra) Nuevo Sur
Bolivia marked its transition to democracy in 1982 when the Armed Forces ceded power to a civilian-led government elected two years prior. [2] Despite continued economic turmoil and political instability, the return to civilian rule mostly closed the cycle of volatility that caused the country to experience a multitude of attempted and successful revolutions and coups d'état in the two ...
From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia. Redirect page. Redirect to: La Razón (La Paz)
Chile beats Bolivia 3-2 at a football match in La Paz, disqualifying it from participating in the final tournament of the FIFA World Cup. [13] [14] The school year begins, with distance learning imposed on all nine departmental capitals and the ability for rural sectors to opt for face-to-face or blended learning. [15]
The drinking water supplies to parts of both La Paz and El Alto, the second and third largest cities in Bolivia, were cut off. [129] According to Gen. Williams Kaliman, it was the plan of insurgents to leave these cities without water or fuel and counteractions to guard public services were covered under the so-called " Sebastián Pagador " plan.
2 March – Twenty people are killed and 25 others injured in a bus accident in Colomi, Cochabamba Department. [5] 3 March – Six people are killed when a railing collapses and they fall four floors 16.7 m (55 ft) during a student protest at the Universidad Pública de El Alto (UPEA).
On 18 October 2020, Bolivian voters elected Luis Arce, leader of Evo Morales' MAS-IPSP, as Bolivia's president with 55% of the vote in the first round. Arce's main opponents, Carlos Mesa and Luis Fernando Camacho , received 29% and 14% of the vote, respectively.