Search results
Results from the WOW.Com Content Network
El Deber (Santa Cruz de la Sierra) El Día; El Diario — began publication 5 April 1904; oldest currently in circulation [1] La Estrella del Oriente (Santa Cruz de la Sierra) Hoy; Jornada — began publication February 1948 [1] La Misión; El Mundo (Santa Cruz de la Sierra) El Nacional ; El Nuevo Día (Santa Cruz de la Sierra) Nuevo Sur
Main page; Contents; Current events; Random article; About Wikipedia; Contact us; Pages for logged out editors learn more
Mario Mercado Vaca Guzmán, one of Bolivia's wealthiest entrepreneurs and a well-known ADN militant, owned Última Hora. [2] This newspaper had hired outstanding academics to write its editorials. [2] Perhaps the most politicized of all newspapers in Bolivia was Hoy, owned by Carlos Serrate, an eccentric politician who also owned Radio Méndez. [2]
On 26 June 2024, an attempted military coup occurred in Bolivia, orchestrated by dissident officers of the Armed Forces led by General Juan José Zúñiga.Armed troops occupied the Plaza Murillo in La Paz, the political heart of the country, but withdrew amid domestic and international pressure and after the appointment of a new military high command.
El Diario is a daily newspaper published in La Paz, Bolivia.Incorporated in 1904, it is Bolivia's oldest newspaper and considered a newspaper of record for Bolivia. The newspaper traditionally followed a conservative position in line with its founders, the Carrasco family, one of La Paz's most influential families of the 20th century.
Agencia de Noticias Fides (ANF) is a Bolivian private news agency apostolate of the Society of Jesus headquartered in La Paz, Bolivia. Founded in 1963 by José Gramunt De Moragas, it is Bolivia's oldest news agency, distributing reports on political, economic, and social events, to a majority of the news media. [1] [2]
Unitel dispatched Karla Revollo for this end, which were later sent daily to Bolivia, as well as his later return and death. [1] In 2002, during the flooding of La Paz on February 19, Unitel sent all available reporters to the areas where the tragedy was occurring, while other channels continued to show its normal programming.
Última Hora was a newspaper published in Bolivia. The newspaper began publication on 30 April 1929 and ceased publication in 2001. [1]