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The name "pitazo" refers to whistleblowing. It is part of the Latin American media Rebel Alliance, with Tal Cual and Runrunes. They also collaborate with NGOs to be more informed on diverse groups of people in the nation. [1] According to El País, the aims of El Pitazo are to bring news to the most isolated areas. [1] The company director is ...
In the weeks before his arrest, Hernandez had traveled to Colombia where he had been several times previously. [5] Before he was due home from his trip, he accompanied a friend to the border of Norte de Santander Department and Táchira, Venezuela, [6] a border area that is a dangerous region. [1]
He was posted in El Salvador and Belgium before serving as a first secretary for the Venezuelan Ambassador to the United States in 1978. [15] [18] From 1991 to 1993, González served as the Venezuelan Ambassador to Algeria. [17] He was the Director General of International Policy at the Ministry of Foreign Affairs from 1994 to 1999. [17]
The Caracas–La Guaira highway was blocked by protesters from the El Limón sector. [ 39 ] Europa Press reported protests in Petare, Altamira, Chacaíto, Bellas Artes, La Vega, El Valle, Catia, and La Candelaria, as well as concentrations on the Petare–Guarenas highway, specifically in the parish of Caucagüita in the Sucre Municipality ...
César Batiz graduated from the Universidad del Zulia in 1996. He has worked for the publications Panorama, La Verdad, Últimas Noticias, and La Electricidad de Caracas.In 2008 he returned to Últimas Noticias, [1] the largest-circulation daily in Venezuela [2] as an investigative journalist.
Esperanza por el Cambio (English: Hope for Change) is a Venezuelan political party registered by the National Electoral Council (CNE) with the shortened name El Cambio (Change). [ 1 ] [ 2 ] In the 2018 presidential election , Venezuelan pastor and party leader Javier Bertucci received enough votes to turn Hope for Change into an official ...
A light map of Venezuela on the night of 7 March 2019 and the night of 8 March 2019. [a]Nationwide recurring electrical blackouts in Venezuela began in March 2019. Experts and state-run Corpoelec (Corporación Eléctrica Nacional) sources attribute the electricity shortages to lack of maintenance and to a lack of technical expertise in the country resulting from a brain drain.
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