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Poki may refer to: Kade Poki (born 1988), New Zealand rugby union player; Poki language, a West Chadic language of Bauchi State, Nigeria; Poki Ng (born 1991), Hong Kong singer in the boy band Error; Pokimane (born 1996), Moroccan-Canadian internet personality; Poki, a computer poker player developed at the University of Alberta
Mineros de Zacatecas (English: Zacatecas Miners) is a Mexican professional basketball team, based in Zacatecas City, Zacatecas. The Mineros are part of the Liga Nacional de Baloncesto Profesional, the top professional basketball league in Mexico. [2] The team plays its home games at the Gimnasio Marcelino González, with a capacity of 4,138 ...
On November 11, 1981, the club was founded as Club Deportivo Mineros de Guayana. On November 20, 1981, the club's foundation constitutive act was signed. On January 3, 1982, the club played its first match, against Villa Colombia FC, a Guayana's amateur club. Mineros won 2-0, both goals scored by José Pacheco.
Club Deportivo Mineros de Zacatecas is a Mexican football club based in Zacatecas (city), Zacatecas, Mexico. The club compete in the Mexican Liga de Expansión MX . They are currently managed by Nacho Castro .
[2] In 2015, Mineros de Fresnillo was promoted to Liga Premier de Ascenso after defeating Sahuayo F.C. in the promotion playoff, [3] however, the team had to stay one more season in Liga de nuevos Talentos while modernizing their stadium to do it according to the requirements of the league. [4]
The current leader of the SNTMMSSRM is Napoleón Gómez Urrutia, a disgraced [1] union leader accused of having embezzled US$55 million that was supposed to be used to pay workers' severance payments at the Mexicana de Cananea mining company and that ended up being diverted [2] by Gómez Urrutia, who later fled to Canada to avoid arrest.
Corporación Minera de Bolivia (Comibol), created in 1952 by the nationalization of the country's tin mines, was a huge multi-mineral corporation controlled by organized labor and the second largest tin enterprise in the world, until it was decentralized into five semi-autonomous mining enterprises in 1986. [1]
The Devil's Miner is a 2005 documentary film directed by independent film directors Kief Davidson and Richard Ladkani.The film follows a fourteen-year-old Bolivian boy named Basilio Vargas who along with his twelve-year-old brother Bernardino work in the mines near the city of Potosí.