El Pueblo (Nicaragua): Difference between revisions
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'''Location:''' Nicaragua | '''Location:''' Nicaragua | ||
'''Description of Artwork:''' | '''Description of Artwork:''' ''El Pueblo'' was a Maoist newspaper in Nicaragua, known to urge its readers to sabotage the state economy. | ||
'''The Incident:''' The newspaper was described as counter-revolutionary by the Nicaraguan authorities and closed- down by members of the Sandinista Popular Army. They seized the machinery, materials, and office equipment and arrested two journalists and their assistant. | '''The Incident:''' The newspaper was described as counter-revolutionary by the Nicaraguan authorities and closed- down by members of the Sandinista Popular Army. They seized the machinery, materials, and office equipment and arrested two journalists and their assistant. | ||
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{{DISPLAYTITLE:<span style="font-style: italic;">El Pueblo</span>}} | {{DISPLAYTITLE:<span style="font-style: italic;">El Pueblo</span> (Nicaragua)}} |
Latest revision as of 16:10, 5 January 2012
Date: 1976 - 1984
Region: Central America and the Caribbean
Subject: Political/Economic/Social Opinion
Medium: Print Journalism
Artist: Melvin Wallace, Editor; Carlos Domingo Cuadra, Sr. Writer
Confronting Bodies: members of the Sandinista Popular Army
Dates of Action: January 25, 1980
Location: Nicaragua
Description of Artwork: El Pueblo was a Maoist newspaper in Nicaragua, known to urge its readers to sabotage the state economy.
The Incident: The newspaper was described as counter-revolutionary by the Nicaraguan authorities and closed- down by members of the Sandinista Popular Army. They seized the machinery, materials, and office equipment and arrested two journalists and their assistant.
Results of Incident: The newspaper never reopened. As of June 1981 all those arrested had been released.
Source: Organization of American States, Inter-American Commission of Human Rights