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Budapest (cultural life, buildings, history) The Budapest Times (English, est. 1999, owned by BZT Media, right, conservatism - www.budapesttimes.hu) Cosmopolitan (women's magazine) Elle (fashion magazine) EuroXtrade (engineering and technology magazine) Ezermester (general technology magazine) Filmvilág (art magazine) FourFourTwo (football ...
The Budapest Times is an English-language newspaper reporting on events in Hungary. [ 1 ] [ 2 ] [ 3 ] The paper is published weekly [ 4 ] and is owned by Budapest-Zeitung Kft. [ 5 ]
A crowd of tens of thousands gathered in Hungary’s capital on Saturday in a show of strength behind Prime Minister Viktor Orbán a week before the European Parliament election, a contest he has ...
Budapester Zeitung Logo Budapester Zeitung (BZT) is a privately owned German-language weekly newspaper published in Budapest, Hungary. It was established in April 1999 and has a circulation of about 7000 copies. Since 2003 there has been an English-language sister newspaper, The Budapest Times. It is published by BZT Media Kft, founded by Berlin -born Jan Mainka. Since early 2014, BZT has been ...
Tens of thousands of Hungarians protested in Budapest on Friday at the biggest rally against Prime Minister Viktor Orban's government for years, after a sex-abuse case pardon by President Katalin ...
Ak Zhaik — News service English/Kazakh/Russian language . Khabar — State news agency. Tengrinews.kz — Information portal of Kazakhstan English/Kazakh/Russian languages. Kazakh TV — Kazakh TV news service, English/Kazakh/Russian languages. Bnews — News in Kazakhstan English/Kazakh/Russian languages.
Thousands took to the streets in downtown Budapest on Friday to demand child-protection reform, led by Peter Magyar, a former government insider who recently launched a political movement ...
A few years later, Duna TV became the first Hungarian station to broadcast 24 hours a day. In 2004, Duna TV began to broadcast in North America, South America and Australia. In 2006, Duna TV started its Channel II (Autonomy TV, today Duna World). Duna TV had been originally funded from a television licence fee imposed on owners of television sets.