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La Prensa was founded by Pedro Belli, Gavry Rivas and Enrique Belli on March 2, 1926. In 1930, Pedro Joaquín Chamorro Zelaya became editor-in-chief, and in 1932 he bought the paper with the intention of promoting the principles of the Conservative Party of Nicaragua, as well as publicising historical studies of Nicaragua. [1]
Editora La Prensa SA: Daily: Spanish Other Newspapers. El 19 (daily, digital) 7 Días ... "Nicaragua: News". USA: University of Texas at Austin. "Nicaragua".
La Prensa, founded in 1926, with an estimated circulation of 30,000 in early 1992, continued the family tradition built by the president's late husband, Pedro Joaquín Chamorro Cardenal. [3] At the time of the transition, La Prensa was run by the president's daughter, Cristiana Chamorro de Lacayo also the wife of Antonio Lacayo. [3]
As of late-2019, La Prensa is the last remaining print newspaper in Nicaragua since the September shutdown of fellow opposition paper El Nuevo Diario over a refusal to release physical printing supplies by the Ortega government.
Cristiana Chamorro Barrios (born February 25, 1954) [1] is a Nicaraguan journalist, nonprofit executive and political candidate. Vice-president of La Prensa, she was an aspiring presidential candidate in the 2021 Nicaraguan general election until the Ortega government disqualified her from running and ordered her arrest in early June 2021.
During 1978, there were seven machine gun attacks and attempted bombings of La Prensa, now under the management of Chamorro's widow, Violeta Barrios de Chamorro. [1] Following Somoza's overthrow, she was a part of the FSLN-based junta from 1979 to 1980. [1] She later broke with the FSLN and was elected president of Nicaragua in 1990. [1]
9 Nicaragua. 10 Panama. 11 Peru. 12 Spain. 13 United States. 14 Venezuela. 15 See also. ... La Prensa (California), founded 1999, serving Riverside and San Bernardino ...
In the 1960s he focused on his construction company, Chamorro & Cuadra Contractors SA, formed with Pedro and José Cuadra, but the company faltered after an unsuccessful highway project, prior to the 1972 Nicaragua earthquake. [1] Pedro Joaquín advised liquidating the company and in 1974 he asked Jaime to take over direction of La Prensa's ...