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The Catatumbo campaign has been an ongoing period of strategic violence between militia faction groups in the region since January 2018 and a part of the war on drugs; [4] it was developed after a 2016 peace agreement between the country's government (under the presidency of Juan Manuel Santos) and the Revolutionary Armed Forces of Colombia (FARC) as an attempt to end the Colombian conflict. [5]
This is a list of newspapers in Ecuador.. Ambato. El Heraldo; Babahoyo. Clarín; Bahía de Caráquez. El Globo; Cuenca. El Mercurio; La Tarde; El Tiempo; Galápagos Islands. El Colono; Guayaquil ...
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.
Despite El Espectador had been the Colombian newspaper with the second highest circulation, after El Tiempo, the financial difficulties worsened and in 1997 the Cano family sold most of their shares in Comunican S.A., El Espectador publishing company, to Julio Mario Santo Domingo, who at the time owned Cromos, Caracol Radio (later sold to ...
El Tiempo is a Honduran daily newspaper owned by Jaime Rosenthal. [1] History. On August 31, 2000, the internet domain www.tiempo.hn was purchased by Banco ...
Iván Urdinola Grajales (1 December 1960 – 2 February 2002), also known by the nickname 'El enano' (English: The Dwarf), was a Colombian drug lord who was one of the leaders of the notorious Norte del Valle Cartel. Co-perpetrator of the Trujillo massacre, which occurred between 1988 and 1992.
It was relaunched as a daily, under the new name El Tiempo, following the restoration of democracy after the 1958 Venezuelan coup d'état. [2] Under the management of Jesús Márquez (1978–1985) the newspaper increased its circulation from 6300 to 35,000, and its size from 16 pages to 40. [2]
Ultimas Noticias was described as a tabloid in 1958 by Time magazine, [10] in 2007 by The New York Times, [11] [12] and in 2019 by The Guardian. [8] BBC Monitoring stated in 2019 that Últimas Noticias has "a predominantly pro-government stance"; [13] in the same year, The Guardian characterized the paper as a "pro-Maduro tabloid". [8]