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Canal 4 (Nueva Imagen, S.A.) is a state-run nationwide terrestrial television channel in Nicaragua owned by Informativos de Televisión y Radio S.A. (Intrasa), a company owned by two sons of Nicaraguan President Daniel Ortega, Carlos Enrique "Tino" Ortega and his brother Daniel Edmundo. [2]
The first television channel in Nicaragua opened on VHF channel 8 on July 15, 1956 [2] as Televisión de Nicaragua, S.A., owned by the Novedades newspaper. [3] The government followed on January 11, 1957 with Canal 6. In 1962, the government merged channels 6 and 8, with the latter becoming a relayer of the former. [2]
Template:Panama TV; RPC TV Canal 4; TVN Canal 2; Telemetro Canal 13; FETV Canal 5; ETV Canal 6; SERTV Canal 11; TVMax Canal 9; NexTV Canal 21; Mall TV Canal 7 +23 Canal 23 (Panama's first music station) Enlace Canal 29; NexTV Canal 33 (temp. mirroring signal from +23) Plus Canal 35; Hosana Visión Canal 37; ACP (Canal TV) Canal 25 (water level ...
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Canal 4 (Nicaraguan TV channel) Canal 6 (Nicaraguan TV channel) ... Canal 11 (Nicaragua) Canal 12 (Nicaragua) Canal 15 (Nicaraguan TV channel) CDNN 23; E. Enlace ...
Canal 2 is a Nicaraguan free-to-air television network owned by Televicentro de Nicaragua, S.A., owned by the Mexican media mogul Remigio Ángel González.In theory, the channel's sister channels are those of Grupo Ratensa, but in practice, the channel is an independent operation with support from the Nicaraguan government.
The Communications Research Centre of Nicaragua (CINCO) reported that control over television media by the Sandinista National Liberation Front (FSLN) and President Ortega strengthened throughout 2012. National television was increasingly either controlled by FSLN supporters or directly owned and administered by President Ortega's family members.
With Violeta Chamorro's triumph in the 1990 elections, the network was dismantled [3] [4] and Canal 6 became part of The National Television System (Sistema Nacional de Televisión - SNTV) until 1997 when it was legally declared in bankruptcy under Arnoldo Alemán's government. After 16 years of abandonment, on September 14, 2011, Channel 6 was ...