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Las2orillas is a Colombian news website founded in 2013; its director is María Elvira Bonilla. [1] [2] The website has a section called "Nota Ciudadana", which consists entirely on user-generated content.
Newspaper Headquarters website El Colombiano: Medellín: www.elcolombiano.com El Bogotano: Bogotá: www.elbogotano.com.co La Crónica del Quindío: Armenia
Unlike the above-mentioned newspapers, El Espectador was not closed down by the dictatorship, but it was permanent target of a strong harassment by the government.On May 11, 1954, Primo Guerrero, a correspondent to the newspaper in Quibdó, was put in jail for having written a report in which he complained on the precarious conditions of the capital of Chocó in comparison with the luxury of ...
El Faro is an internationally acclaimed Central American digital news outlet founded in 1998 in El Salvador. [2] In April 2023, El Faro moved its administrative and legal operations to San José, Costa Rica , registering the newsroom as the non-profit Fundación Periódica. [ 3 ]
El Tiempo (English: "Time" or "The Times") is a nationally distributed broadsheet daily newspaper in Colombia launched on January 30, 1911. As of 2019 [update] , El Tiempo had the highest circulation in Colombia with an average daily weekday of 1,137,483 readers, rising to 1,921,571 readers for the Sunday edition.
El Colombiano (lit. ' The Colombian ' ) is the leading newspaper in Antioquia Department in Colombia whose headquarters are located in Medellín . The first edition of this newspaper was published on February 6, 1912, which only had one page, 13 advertisements, but no news articles.
As the oldest newspaper in Colombia still in circulation, El Espectador is considered a newspaper of record for Colombia and a home for prominent writers, [2] including the 1982 Nobel Prize Laurete Gabriel García Márquez. It is a member of the Inter American Press Association and the Asociación de Diarios Colombianos (ANDIARIOS). It defined ...
It was founded in 1925 [1] with the name El Siglo by Laureano Gómez Castro and José de la Vega, but its staunch opposition to the military rule of General Gustavo Rojas Pinilla led it to be closed by the Government in 1953, and only reopened at the end of the dictatorship in 1957.