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The mass media in Nicaragua consist of several different types of communications media: television, radio, cinema, newspapers, magazines, and Internet-based Web sites. [1] Freedom of speech is a right guaranteed by the Constitution of Nicaragua. There is no official state censorship of the media in Nicaragua. [2]
Grupo Ratensa (Radio y Televisión de Nicaragua, S.A.) is the Nicaraguan subsidiary of Albavisión, a Latin American media company owned by Guatemalan-Mexican-American businessman Remigio Ángel González.
Radio La Primerísima, Managua: 105.3 FM Stereo Romance, Managua: 103.5 FM & 1440 AM Radio Maranatha, Managua: 99.1 FM & 600 AM La Nueva Radio Ya, Managua: 97.5 FM & 540 AM Radio Corporación, Managua: 95.7 FM Radio Life, Matagalpa: 107.7 FM Radio Sultana, Granada: 90.1 FM Radio Stereo Yes, Matagalpa: 101.5 FM Radio Juvenil, Managua
[1] Nicavisión is also the owner of a local network of radio stations, including Radio Amor, Radio Sonora, Estación X, Radio Magic and 106.7 FM. During the 2018–2022 Nicaraguan protests , TELCOR, the broadcasting regulatory agency in Nicaragua, ordered cable providers to remove Canal 12 and several other stations that were providing news ...
Radio Maria was one of Nicaragua's few remaining media controlled by the Catholic Church, which has seen authorities seize many of its assets since clerics served as mediators during mass protests ...
Radio stations: More than 100 radio stations, nearly all privately owned; Radio Nicaragua is government-owned and Radio Sandino is controlled by the Sandinista National Liberation Front (FSLN) (2007). [1] Radios: 1.24 million (1997). [needs update]
Fabio Gadea Mantilla (born November 9, 1931, in Ocotal, Nueva Segovia) is a Nicaraguan radio journalist, writer, and politician.He is owner and co-founder of the news radio station Radio Corporación.
The channel was owned by Televisión de Nicaragua, S.A. and broadcast from the building of the now-defunct Novedades newspaper, which, like the station, was owned by Anastasio Somoza García. Equipment came from abroad and was controlled by technicians and engineers from Radio Managua and the United States.