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This is a list of newspapers in Venezuela, both national and regional. It also includes newspapers with other languages and themes. It also includes newspapers with other languages and themes. National
In 2013, 90 newspapers were in circulation in Venezuela. [23] Following the election of President Nicolás Maduro, 55 newspapers in Venezuela stopped circulation due to difficulties and government censorship between 2013 and 2018. [24] By 2019, the number of newspapers circulating in Venezuela dropped to 28. [23]
Correo del Orinoco (the Orinoco Post) is a Venezuelan newspaper launched in 2009 with government backing. [1] It is named for its nineteenth-century predecessor, which under the patronage of Simón Bolívar promoted Venezuelan independence. It uses the slogan "the artillery of thought".
On its final front-page editorial, El Carabobeño explained that the government agency that has the responsibility of distributing newsprint had not attempted to sell the necessary resources to the newspaper. [4] The act of withholding resources from media organizations was a common practice of censorship in Venezuela under the Bolivarian ...
On 5 July 2014, it was announced that after 105 years of ownership, the Mata family had sold a controlling stake in the newspaper to a Spanish investment firm linked to the Venezuelan government, Politician S.L., a firm that "was created with the purpose of acquiring" El Universal.
Agencia Venezolana de Noticias (AVN) is the national news agency of Venezuela. It is part of the Ministry of Popular Power for Communication and Information (MINCI), but is run as an autonomous service. [1] It reports on national and regional issues, as well as on Latin America in general.
Diario VEA is a daily newspaper in Venezuela. It was founded in Caracas in 2003. It is owned by the government. Its slogan is Comprometidos con Venezuela ("Committed to Venezuela"). Its director is Guillermo García Ponce. It comes in a tabloid format. It has been described as "the mouthpiece of the Bolivarian Revolution". [1]
The Daily Journal was an English language newspaper published in Caracas, Venezuela. It was founded by Jules Waldman, an American journalist who lived in Caracas from 1940 to his death in 1990. [1] The target market of the newspaper was English-reading people in Venezuela, which included expatriates of all nationalities as well as bilingual ...