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La Jornada has presence in eight states of the Mexican Republic with local editions in Aguascalientes, Guerrero, Jalisco, Michoacán, Morelos, San Luis Potosí, Puebla and Veracruz (La Jornada de Oriente). As of 2006 it had approximately 287,000 readers in Mexico City, [1] and, according to them, their website has approximately 180,000 daily ...
On 10 April, by a near unanimous vote (Ecuador voted against, El Salvador abstained, and Mexico was absent), the Permanent Council adopted a resolution "strongly condemn[ing] the intrusion into the premises of the Embassy of Mexico in Ecuador and the acts of violence against the well-being and dignity of the diplomatic personnel of the mission".
Jornada, a newspaper published in La Paz, Bolivia; La Jornada, Mexico City newspaper; La Jornada, Nicaraguan newspaper; La Jornada Latina, Cincinnati weekly newspaper; Jornada, newspaper in Catalan distributed between May 5 and October 27, 2018.
Argentina got its 2026 World Cup qualifying campaign off to a winning start thanks to yet another sublime Lionel Messi free kick.
Organización Editorial Mexicana, also known as OEM, is the largest Mexican print media company and the largest newspaper company in Latin America.The company owns a large newswire service, it includes 70 Mexican daily newspapers, 24 radio stations and 44 websites.
The publication has been accused by the political left in Mexico of having a cozy relationship with past governments during key periods in the nation's fraught history. The day after the Tlatelolco massacre on October 3, 1968, at the height of the Mexican Dirty War , El Universal published misleading headlines such as, «Terrorists and Soldiers ...
In 1819, Ecuador was part of the Gran Colombia (which included present day Colombia, Ecuador, Panama and Venezuela). After its break up, Mexico recognized and established diplomatic relations with Ecuador in June 1830. [1] In 1837, Mexico opened a consulate in Guayaquil which subsequently became its first diplomatic mission in South America.
The following countries had members of the Foro de São Paulo as the main opposition parties in their parliaments and/or were the second electoral force in the past elections: Argentina – Justicialist Party (Union for the Homeland) Dominican Republic – Dominican Liberation Party Ecuador – Citizen Revolution Movement