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A Sunday supplement entitled Estampas was also published; and as a contribution to education, the supplement El Escolar. [5] With the rise of a military government in 1968, difficulties began. On October 31 of that year, Expreso and Extra were closed by order of the regime of General Juan Velasco Alvarado. However, a protest by the Federation ...
El Comercio - Lima; [2] [1] owned by conglomerate El Comercio Group; La Crónica (Peru) Cronicawan - Peru's first nationally circulated Quechua language newspaper; Diario El Callao Diario El Gobierno - online newspaper; Diario Correo - Lima; [1] owned by conglomerate El Comercio Group; Diario del Cusco - Cusco [1] Expreso - Lima [3] [1] Extra ...
Keiko Sofía Fujimori Higuchi was born on 25 May 1975 in the Jesús María district of Lima, the capital of Peru. [1] [2] Fujimori's parents are Japanese Peruvians; her father is former President of Peru Alberto Fujimori, who was elected in the 1990 Peruvian general election, and her mother is Susana Higuchi. [3]
El Comercio Group is the largest media conglomerate in Peru and one of the largest in South America. [ 2 ] [ 3 ] [ 4 ] Though they opposed the Alberto Fujimori government, [ 12 ] [ 13 ] the company has typically supported right-wing politicians, including President Alan García and Alberto's daughter, Keiko Fujimori . [ 5 ]
[223] [224] Peru's physical land-based telephone network had a dramatic increase in telephone penetration from 2.9% in 1993 to 5.9% in 1996 and 6.2% in 2000, [225] and a dramatic decrease in the wait for a telephone line: the average wait went from 70 months in 1993 (before privatization) to two months in 1996 (after privatization). [226]
Expreso Aéreo was a small Peruvian regional airline based at Jorge Chávez International Airport. [1] It was a passenger and cargo airline that operated from 1991 ...
Popular Renewal (Spanish: Renovación Popular, RP) is a Peruvian conservative political party. Founded in 2020, the party is the successor of the former National Solidarity Party founded and led by former Lima Mayor Luis Castañeda Lossio.
The primary candidates in Peruvian elections typically become apparent two months prior to elections. [1] In the first wave of support, Yonhy Lescano saw initial support, though he was surpassed by Rafael López Aliaga, a far-right businessman whose speech was similar to Catholic extremism. [2]