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El Bocón - Lima; [1] owned by conglomerate El Comercio Group; El Chino - Lima; El Comercio - Lima; [2] [1] owned by conglomerate El Comercio Group; La Crónica (Peru) Cronicawan - Peru's first nationally circulated Quechua language newspaper; Diario El Callao Diario El Gobierno - online newspaper
The newspaper Correo has shown a conservative stance during the era of terrorism in the country.. On April 25, 2015, Correo published on its website an article titled "La otra cara de la moneda: así atacaron los antimineros", which generated controversy over the veracity of the information, and they were accused of setting up scenes. [6]
Ojo was founded on March 14, 1968, as a morning newspaper in Lima. [1] Its founder was the businessman Luis Banchero Rossi, who had already founded the newspaper chain Correo, under the leadership of the Empresa Periodística Nacional SA (Epensa).
Diario Oficial El Peruano (The Peruvian Official Newspaper) is the official daily newspaper of Peru. The paper was founded on 22 October 1825 by Simón Bolívar although it changed names between the following decades and it was not published continuously since its inception.
A Sunday supplement entitled Estampas was also published; and as a contribution to education, the supplement El Escolar. [5] With the rise of a military government in 1968, difficulties began. On October 31 of that year, Expreso and Extra were closed by order of the regime of General Juan Velasco Alvarado. However, a protest by the Federation ...
Historia de la República del Perú. Lima: Diario "El Comercio". ISBN 9972-205-62-2. Juan Augusto Benavides Estrada (1991). Nuevo Atlas del Perú y el Mundo. Lima: Escuela Nueva S.A. Several authors (2003). Atlas departamental del Perú. Lima: Peisa S.A. ISBN 9972-40-257-6. Julio Villanueva Sotomayor (2002). El Perú en los tiempos modernos ...
Caretas was founded in October 1950 [1] by Doris Gibson and Francisco Igartua.. In the mid-1950s, Gibson's son, Enrique Zileri, returned from Europe (from where he had been making contributions for the magazine) to join Caretas.
In 2012, the official website of Perú.21 was briefly blocked by the Government of Peru after it had published an article criticizing the government's budget management. [3] A few months later, a former journalist who had earlier worked for Perú.21 was arrested and imprisoned for hacking into the email accounts of government officials. [4]