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Founded December 23, 1979, under the Ministry of Information and Coordination, it was Haiti's second television station after Télé Haïti (Channels 2 and 4 with the latter in English). In 1987, it was merged with the state-run Radio Nationale into a network called RTNH ( Radio Télévision Nationale d'Haïti ) and in 1995, was taken over by ...
The provinces, Radio Voix du Nord (1945), Radio Citadelle (1950) and Voix Évangélique in the North department and Radio Indépendance in Gonaïves/Artibonite (1953) emerged. 1957–1986. The coming of TV established the domination of audiovisual media. Télé Haiti, in 1959, became the first TV station in the country as a callsign 4VMR-TV. [3]
Canal de Gobierno (television Gubernamental Organismo Ejecutivo) Guatevision "Un canal como debe ser" Canal Antigua: "Mira sin límites" NTV (Nacional Tele Vision): "Lo que nadie se atreve a mostrar" 18-50 Televisión: "Diferente" VEA Canal:"Vida, Ecología y Ambiente" Expresion TV : "Un canal con actitud" Región + (Quetzaltenango)
Two police stations near Haiti’s National Palace were attacked by armed individuals Friday night, as gang violence in the Caribbean nation’s capital of Port-au-Prince continued to spiral.
The station was founded as Radio Haiti and was broadcast on both AM and FM and later renamed to Radio Haiti-Inter. Jean Dominique, who started working at the station as a reporter, bought the lease to the station in 1968. The station was the target of various attacks by oppressive government regimes throughout its history, due to the democratic ...
PORT-AU-PRINCE (Reuters) -Haiti will replace the head of its national police force, Frantz Elbe, with former chief Rameau Normil, the prime minister's office said on Friday, as the country faces a ...
Haiti’s national penitentiary is on fire after a blaze broke out in the building on Thursday morning, according to Reuters. A video posted to social media reportedly showed black smoke coming ...
At 3 am on December 17, 2001, local radio stations reported an attack on the National Palace, describing it as a commando-style assault.Three hours later, Jacques Maurice, a government spokesman, publicly announced an attempted coup, stating that 80 gunmen had infiltrated the National Palace.