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El País is a national Uruguayan daily newspaper. It is based in the capital city of Montevideo and is regarded as the newspaper with the largest circulation in the country. [ 2 ] It was first published on September 14, 1918 and previously belonged to the same media group as the television network Teledoce .
El Observador (Montevideo) Digital edition; El País (Montevideo) Digital edition; La Diaria (Montevideo) Digital edition; La República (Montevideo) Digital edition; MercoPress (Montevideo) Digital edition; Últimas Noticias (Montevideo) Digital edition; El Telégrafo Digital edition
Icon of the Virgin Mary by Kiko Argüello, the Spanish painter who initiated the Neocatechumenal Way.. The Neocatechumenal Way, also known as the Neocatechumenate, or NCW is a program in the Catholic Church. [6]
A referendum on the Urgent Consideration Law was held in Uruguay to ask the electorate if 135 articles of Law 19,889 (known as the "Urgent Consideration Law", "Urgency Law" or simply "LUC") – approved by the General Assembly in 2020 and considered as the main legislative initiative of the coalition government of President Luis Lacalle Pou — should be repealed.
During the following years, Sanguinetti worked as a journalist, working from a viewpoint that was critical of the de facto Government, in El Día Newspaper (1973–1981), Visión Newspaper (since 1974, as an opinion columnist, a collaboration which he has continued up until today), and in the weekly publication Correo de los Viernes ...
El País was the first pro-democracy newspaper within a context where all the other Spanish newspapers were influenced by Franco's ideology. [16] The circulation of the paper was 116,600 copies in its first year. [17] It rose to 138,000 copies in 1977. [17] In 1978, El País suffered a far-right terrorist attack due to political upheaval. Four ...
Former building of El Día in downtown Montevideo.. El Día is an influential Uruguayan daily newspaper.. It was established in 1886 by the prominent Colorado politician José Batlle y Ordóñez.
Caras y Caretas published its first edition on 3 August 2001. [1] In February 2017, a reporter for the magazine had her head grazed by a bullet shot by two individuals on a motorcycle, according to the Committee to Protect Journalists.