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The first website for Granma was created in August 1996, making Granma the first media organization in Cuba to have a website. The Granma daily news was first published on a separate website in July 1997, and the two sites were later merged. The website includes versions of the newspaper in five languages other than Spanish, and updates all of ...
Juventud Rebelde, daily newspaper of Cuba's young communists. This is a list of newspapers in Cuba.Although the Cuban media is controlled by the Cuban People through the Cuban State apparatus, the national newspapers of Cuba are not directly published by the state, they are instead published by various Cuban political organizations with official approval.
Cuba has several dozen online regional newspapers. The only national daily paper is Granma, the official organ of the PCC. A weekly version, Granma International, is published in English, Spanish, French, Portuguese, Turkish and German, available online. Havana residents also have their own weekly, Havana-oriented paper, Tribuna de La Habana.
La Demajagua is the official Cuban newspaper of the provincial committee of the Cuban Communist Party in Granma Province.It is published in Spanish and English. It was named after the homonym sugar mill, near Manzanillo, in which Carlos Manuel de Céspedes issued his cry of independence, the "10th of October Manifesto", in 1868.
(Granma) Cuba’s economic paralysis continued Wednesday, with the government extending the orders for all activity to remain shut down until Sunday as the island tries to recover from a ...
Granma, a yacht in which Fidel Castro and his revolutionary expedition sailed to Cuba in 1956; CF Granma, a Cuban football club; Granma (baseball) or Granma Alazanes, a baseball team in the Cuban National Series; Granma, the official newspaper of the Cuban Communist Party; Granma Province, a Cuban province
Banner denouncing the magazines Diario de la Marina and Avance.Targets of press regulation and later censorship. A coletilla (Spanish word meaning: "tagline", in English), is the term used in the English language to describe the political disclaimers published in Cuban newspapers, in the immediate aftermath of the Cuban Revolution. [1]
At the 2018 parliamentary election, Granma was the province with the highest proportion of votes recorded for the full list. [4] On 12 April 2020, Veguitas, a town in Gramna Province, recorded a temperature of 39.7 °C (103.5 °F). This is the highest temperature to have ever been recorded in Cuba. [5]