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Canal de Mozambique [3] Maputo Imprensa Livra-te Website: Last edition: 13th May 2013 Correio da Manhã [2] Maputo Correio Semanal [2] Maputo Demos [2] Maputo Desafio [2] Maputo Diario de Mocambique [2] Beira Domingo [4] Maputo Expresso da Tarde [2] Maputo Fim de Samana [4] Maputo Notícias [4] Maputo Rede da Criança Website: O Popular [4 ...
Televisão de Moçambique, established in 1981, [7] is Mozambique's only state-controlled television station. [2] It is headquartered in Maputo. Approximately five privately owned stations are also headquartered in Maputo. [2] Foreign television stations such as Portuguese state TV and Brazilian-based Miramar have high viewership rates. [8]
STV Notícias is a 24-hour television news channel of the Mozambican television network STV (Soico Televisão), the first private Mozambican network which also owns the influential Mozambican newspaper O País (The Nation). It airs in the Portuguese language and it is available in cable and satellite.
TV Miramar, also simply known as Miramar, is a Mozambican free-to-air terrestrial television channel owned by Rede de Comunicação Miramar, which, in turn, is a member of Edir Macedo's Grupo Record. Since 2020, Leandro Pinheiro has been the current executive director of the Miramar group.
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Soico TV started on October 25, 2002, after a month of experimental broadcasts, [1] by former TVM employee Daniel David. Initially, the channel's programming was entirely in English, due to an affiliation agreement with the South African pan-African television network TVAfrica (at the time CTV Africa), with which it established a strong partnership. [2]
Televisão de Moçambique (TVM, lit."Television of Mozambique") is the national public broadcaster of Mozambique.It is headquartered in Maputo, the country's capital.. The network receives 60 percent of its operational financing from the government and the remaining 40 percent from advertisers and other commercial sources.
In the period of 1995–1996 Diário de Notícias had a circulation of 63,000 copies slightly down on its 1880s circulation and below its peak as a propaganda newspaper for the Estado Novo in the 1930s (circulation of 120,000 in mainland Portugal and an additional 70,000 in its colonies), making it the seventh best-selling newspaper and third best selling daily newspaper in the country. [14]