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Diario de Mocambique [2] Beira Domingo [4] Maputo Expresso da Tarde [2] Maputo Fim de Samana [4] Maputo Notícias [4] Maputo Rede da Criança Website: O Popular [4] Savana [4] Maputo Tempo [4] Maputo Zambeze [4] Maputo
STV Notícias is a 24-hour television news channel of the Mozambican television network STV (Soico Televisão), the first private Mozambican network which also owns the influential Mozambican newspaper O País (The Nation). It airs in the Portuguese language and it is available in cable and satellite.
Headquarters of Rádio Moçambique in KaMpfumo district of Maputo (photo 2009). Radio programmes are the most widespread form of media in the country. [1] The most influential radio stations are state-owned, with most of the private radio stations having only a local audience.
Soico TV started on October 25, 2002, after a month of experimental broadcasts, [1] by former TVM employee Daniel David. Initially, the channel's programming was entirely in English, due to an affiliation agreement with the South African pan-African television network TVAfrica (at the time CTV Africa), with which it established a strong partnership. [2]
The President of Mozambique was elected using the two-round system. [18] The 250 members of the Assembly of the Republic were elected by proportional representation in eleven multi-member constituencies based on the country's provinces and on a first-past-the-post basis from two single-member constituencies representing Mozambican citizens in Africa and Europe.
The Optimist Party for the Development of Mozambique (Portuguese: Partido Otimista pelo Desenvolvimento de Moçambique, PODEMOS) is a Mozambican political party of the democratic socialist ideology founded on 7 May 2019 by a sector of the ruling Mozambican Liberation Front (FRELIMO) dissident from the leadership headed by President Filipe Nyusi.
According to Carta de Moçambique (4, 6 May) 7000 ghost soldiers were found. "Among the irregularities detected in recent months is the growing number of children of former combatants, generals, colonels and politicians, who swell the ranks of the FADM and receive salaries without ever having been in military training, let alone setting foot in ...
The Mozambican Civil War (Portuguese: Guerra Civil Moçambicana) was a civil war fought in Mozambique from 1977 to 1992 due to a combination of local strife and the polarizing effects of Cold War politics. [5]