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The Ley de Emisión del Pensamiento (Law on Expression of Thought) prohibits libel, slander, and treason in printed form, and stipulates that the author of any publication containing an opinion that the judiciary considers to be subversive, morally damaging, or "disrespectful" of private life may be subject to punishment. The Law on Expression ...
KOMING-PRO - Gradiška (merged with Blic.net) IPTV distribution: SUPER TV by LOGOSOFT Sarajevo; Moja TV & Moja webTV by BH Telecom Sarajevo; Open IPTV by M:tel Banja Luka; HOME.TV by HT Eronet Mostar; DTH distribution: Total TV BH Banja Luka (member of United Group)
The Guatemalan government issued a license for channel 11 in 1960, announcing on December 27 that year as "Voz e Imagen de Centroamérica" on an advertisement at the El Imparcial newspaper, promising an 8,000-watt antenna and a budget of 25,000 quetzales. [2]
The channel began operations on March 5, 2006, under the television company Latitud Televisión, operating channels 31 and 35 UHF in Guatemala City, they were owned by the Botrán family (owners of the liquor company Industrias Licoreras de Guatemala), in March 2008 the 70% of the company was acquired by Mexico's TV Azteca to operate in Guatemala under the Azteca 31 and Azteca 35 channels.
No domestic terrestrial television stations; Marpin Telecoms and SAT Telecommunications Ltd, Dominica's cable TV operators both offer locally produced programming, plus channels in NTSC from the US, Latin America and the Caribbean, as well as Guadeloupe and Martinique (converted from SECAM).
Canal 8 (Guatemala) Canal 11 (Guatemalan TV channel) Canal 13 (Guatemalan TV channel) G. Guatevisión; T. TV Azteca Guate
Mass media in Guatemala is dominated in the area of commercial television by Mexican media mogul Remigio Ángel González, who since the mid-1990s has "virtual monopoly control of that nation's commercial television airwaves". [1] González controls four television stations in Guatemala - El Super Canal, Televisiete, Teleonce and Trecevisión. [2]
In 1997, Cable & Wireless bought a 50% share of the Panamanian INTEL (Instituto Nacional de Telecomunicaciones). [24] After the deal, the company was called Cable & Wireless Panama. In 2004, the group purchased a controlling stake in Monaco Telecom from Vivendi Universal.