Search results
Results From The WOW.Com Content Network
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]
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 ...
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.
Basílio Zefanias Muhate (born 28 September 1979 in Chimoio) is a Mozambican economist and politician who served as the chairman (General Secretary) of the FRELIMO Party's youth organization, the Mozambican Youth Organisation (OJM), and is a member of the Central Committee of FRELIMO since November 2010. [1]
Vieira was born in Tete, Mozambique, on 4 May 1941.He was the great-grandson of pt:Julião José da Silva Vieira, a Portuguese soldier and colonial administrator, and maternal cousin to Orlando da Costa, a Portuguese writer.
Mozambique, [d] officially the Republic of Mozambique, [e] is a country located in Southeast Africa bordered by the Indian Ocean to the east, Tanzania to the north, Malawi and Zambia to the northwest, Zimbabwe to the west, and Eswatini and South Africa to the south and southwest.
Mondlane was born on 17 January 1974 in Lichinga, Niassa Province, Mozambique. [10] He earned a degree in forest engineering from Eduardo Mondlane University. [11] Prior to his entry into politics, he led the "Jovens Solidários" movement in the Kambukwana district of Maputo from 1990 to 2000, which provided aid to victims of the 2000 Mozambique flood.
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]