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Classica FM - 106.9 FM Santa Cruz de la Sierra (Adult Contemporary Music) Radio Activa - 91.9 FM Santa Cruz de la Sierra; Radio Atlantica - 88.9 FM Santa Cruz de la Sierra; Radio Betania - 93.7 FM Santa Cruz; Radio Disney Bolivia - 98.7 FM Santa Cruz, 102.5 FM La Paz & 107.5 FM Cochabamba; Radio Integración - 90.3 FM Montero, Sta Cruz.
Radio broadcast stations: AM 171, FM 73, shortwave 77 (1999). [1] Television broadcast stations: 48 (1997). [1] Bolivia has a large number of radio and TV stations broadcasting with private media outlets dominating. [1] There has been a recent, rapid growth of state-owned media, including a network of community radios. [2]
UNITEL (UNIVERSAL DE TELEVISIÓN) [1] is a Bolivian commercial television network headquartered in Santa Cruz de la Sierra, Bolivia. It was founded in 1987 in Santa Cruz de la Sierra as Teleoriente, which in 1997 created the current network and bought two Telesistema Boliviano stations. It is owned by businessman Osvaldo Monasterio Nieme. [2]
Under Peru's single concession regime all telecom services, including fixed-line, mobile, pay TV, and Internet, are provided under unified concessions that cover the entire country. [1] Privatization began in 1994 when the state-owned companies Compañía Peruana de Teléfonos S.A. (CPT) and Entel Perú were auctioned to Telefónica de España ...
The tension between Peru and Bolivia would last until 1847. That year, a clear boundary agreement was reached on November 3. On behalf of Peru, Minister Domingo Elías; for Bolivia, Miguel Maria de Aguirre. The border would be designated by a commission, adopting the rivers, lakes, mountains or arcifinio limits as boundaries.
Given the rumors of the closure of Congress and the desire of the government of that time to have power over the country to become a dictator, [2] President René Barrientos Ortuño signs the Supreme Decree 08395, on June 19, 1968, with which he founded the Bolivian Radio and Television Company (RTB), and later, with Supreme Decree 8571 (November 20, 1968) decides to change the name to Empresa ...
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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]