Search results
Results From The WOW.Com Content Network
La Prensa (lit. ' The Press ') is a Honduran newspaper founded on 26 October 1964, by Organización Publicitaria, S.A., whose publications also include El Heraldo and Diario Deportivo Diez. In 2008, La Prensa reported its audited circulation as 61,000 units. [1] It has full color and tabloid-sized pages.
La Prensa (Honduras) T. El Tiempo (Honduras) La Tribuna (Honduras) This page was last edited on 10 July 2023, at 22:59 (UTC). Text is available under the ...
On 24 November 2022, the government of Honduras declared a state of emergency regarding gang violence in the country. [6] On 3 December 2022, the government announced that some constitutional rights would be suspended in the cities of Tegucigalpa and San Pedro Sula to crack down on criminal gangs in those two cities, particularly Mara Salvatrucha (MS-13) and 18th Street Gang.
The anti-Zelaya demonstrators, numbering over 10,000 according to La Prensa, chanted against Zelaya, Hugo Chávez, and foreign interference in Honduran affairs. [ 91 ] In San Pedro Sula , 350 police and military broke up the thousands of pro-Zelaya protesters who were demonstrating in the center of the city with tear gas and water cannons and ...
Zelaya then issued a new executive decree PCM-020-2009 (La Gaceta article number 31945) to replace decrees PCM-05-2009 and PCM-019-2009. The new decree called for a "Public Opinion Survey Convening a Constitutional Assembly" and referred to it as "an official activity of the Government of the Republic of Honduras". [14]
Organisations and individuals in Honduras, including the National Resistance Front against the coup d’État in Honduras, [226] Marvin Ponce of the Democratic Unification Party, [226] and Bertha Oliva of Comité de Familiares de Detenidos Desaparecidos en Honduras, [227] and internationally, including Mercosur, [228] President Cristina ...
David Romero Ellner (died 18 July 2020) [1] was a Honduran journalist, lawyer and politician. He was a Liberal party congressman and formerly mayor of Tegucigalpa. [2] [3] He was director of Radio Globo and Globo TV. [4]
The contracts were approved by the National Congress of Honduras when Hernández was its president and the party funding committee was headed by his sister, Hilda Hernández. Hernández has accepted that his election campaign received money from companies tied to the scandal, but denies any personal knowledge.