Flore santisteban wikipedia Continue This article does not provide any sources. Please help improve this article by adding quotes to reliable sources. Non-sources of materials can be challenged and removed. Find sources: Peru Constituent Assembly - newspaper news book scientist JSTOR (May 2013) (Learn how and when to delete this message template) Constituent Assembly Asamblea ConstituyenteRepublic PeruTypeUnicameral HistoryReconsiveds28 July 1978Disaided13 July 1979President Of the Republic of PeruSpresesioncongress of the Republic of PeruLeaderPresident of the Constituent AssemblyVtor Raul Haya de la Torre, The Peruvian Party of Apres seats100The SeatLigia Palace (Peru) Constituent Assembly was the tenth Constituent Assembly of Peru, convened by the government of General Francisco Morales Bermudez to promote the return of democracy after a decade of self-styled revolutionary government of the armed forces. It was settled on July 28, 1978 and was led by Victor Raul Gaya de la Torre, the historic leader of the American People's Revolutionary Alliance. His main mission was to draft a new constitution to replace the old Constitution of 1933. This new Constitution was adopted and adopted on 12 July 1979 and came into force on 28 July 1980, following the opening of the constitutional government of architect Fernando Belaende Terry. Fourteen years later, it was replaced by the 1993 Constitution. The composition and structure of the Council Victor Raul Gaya de la Torre, President Luis Alberto Sanchez, First Vice President and Chairman of the Constitutional Committee Ernesto Alaiza Grandi, Second Vice President Jorge Lozada Stanbury, First Secretary Rafael Vega Garcia, Second Secretary Manuel Adrian pricecen Castillo, pro Secretary Carlos Roca Caceres, Librarian Pro Secretary Mois Victor Raul Aire de la Torre 2. Ramiro Priale 3. Andres Townsend 4. Fernando Leon de Vivero 5. Carlos Manuel Cox Rouse 6. Luis Heisen 7. Carlos Enrique Melgar 8. Carlos Enrique Ferreiros 9. Javier Valle Ristra 10. Luis Rodriguez Vildosola 11. Hector Vargas Hea 12. Humberto Carranza Piedra 13. Eulogio Tapia Olatte 14. Lucio Muniz Flores 15. Luis Rivera Tamayo 16. Jorge Lozada Stanbury 17. Alfonso Ramos Alva 18. Alan Garcia Perez 19. Gustavo Garcia Mundaka 20. Mario Pelaez Bazan 21. Julio Cruzado zavala 22. Luis Alberto Sanchez 23. Romualdo Biaggi Rodriguez 24. Guillermo Baca Aginaga 25. Jorge Torres Vallejo 26. Saturnino Berraspi Mendes 27. Carlos Roca 28. Urbina Julve Chiriaco 29. Lucio Galarza Villar 30. Arnaldo Alvarado DeGregort 31. Luis Negreiros 32. Josemel Munoz Cordova 33. Enrique Chirinos Soto 34. Francisco Chirinos Soto 35. Arturo Miranda Valenzuela 36. Pedro Arana Chiros 37. Cesar Vizcarra Vargas Christian People's Party 38. Luis Bedoya Reyes 39. Federico Tovar Freire Xavier Barron Cebreros 41. Alberto Thorndick Elmore 42. Andres Aramburu Menchaka 43. Clochaldo Salazar Peniillo 44. Mario Pohler Ugarteche 45. Roberto Ramirez del Villar Beaumont 46. Oscar Olivares Montano 47. Edwin Montesinos Ruiz 48. Rafael Vega Garcia 49. Lauro Munoz Garay 50. Ernesto Alaiza Grandi 51. Moises Wall Devil 52. Manuel Kawacito Nagana 53. Pedro Gotuzzo Fernandeni 54. Gabriela Porto Cardenas de Power 55. Rafael Risko Boado 56. Genix Ruiz Hidalgo 57. Miguel Angel Arevalo del Valle 58. Jorge Neira Bisso 59. Celso Sotomarino Chavez 60. Armando Buendia Gutierrez 61. Miguel Angel Mufareh Nemi 62. Ruben Chang Gamarra Popular Workers Student Farmers Front 63. Hugo Blanco Galdos 64. Genaro Ledesma Isquita 65. Magda Benavides Morales 66. Hernan Kuentas Anchi 67. German Chamba Calle 68. Ricardo Napuri Shapiro 69. Enrique Fernandez Chacon 70. Juan Cornejo Gomez 71. Cesar Augusto Mateu Moya 72. Romain Ovidio Montoya Chavez 73. Victoriano Lazaro Gutierrez 74. Saturnino Paredes Macedo Peruvian Communist Party 75. Raul Acosta Salas 76. Eduardo Castillo Sanchez 77. Luis Alberto Delgado Behar 78. Jorge del Prado 79. Isodoro Gamarra Ramirez 80. Alejandro Olivera Vila Revolutionary Socialist Party 81. Antonio Aragon Gallegos 82. Miguel Echeandia Urbina 83. Averino Mar Arias 84. Antonio Mesa Cuadra 85. Leonidas Rodriguez Figueras 86. Alberto Ruiz Eldredge people's Democratic Union 87. Carlos Malpica Silva Santisteban 88. Javier Diez Canseco 89. Ricardo Diaz Chavez 90. Victor Cuadros Paredes workers and farmers National Front 91. Pedro Caceres Velazquez 92. Roger Caceres Velazquez 93. Ernesto Sanchez Fajardo 94. Jesus Velis Lizarraga Christian Democratic Party 95. Hector Cornejo Chavez 96. Carlos Arturo Moretti Riccardi Peruvian Democratic Movement 97. Marco Antonio Garrido Malo 98. Javier Ortez de Sevallos Adriast National Union 99. Manuel Adrian Castrolo 100. Victor Freundt Innovations of the Constitution The main innovations of this Constitution, compared to its predecessor, were: The President, two vice-presidents and members of Congress (deputies and senators) will be elected jointly every five years in the general election (previous repairs were canceled by parliamentary by a third or half) Created a second round of presidential elections, should not reach more than half (50% plus one) of the votes indeed of the Republic. It can be seen in full or in part bills passed in Congress and can dissolve the Chamber of Deputies if it is condemned by three of the presidential cabinet. May also grant clemency and commute sentences. It also gave him more power over the budget, which allowed him more opportunities to implement his policies. Corrected parliamentary excessive powers mentioned in the 1933 Constitution Limited death penalty for cases of treason in a foreign war. It was abolished for crimes such as murder and others included in the law. Established citizenship for all Peruvians from the age of 18 (until the minimum age of 21) it abolished the restriction on voting by illiterate, watching the right of the rebels (obviously to defend the constitutional order, not to change or bruise) created the Constitutional Tribunal of Peru, as the controlling body of the Constitution on the economic side, The rules would be a social market economy, corporate pluralism and freedom of trade and industry extracted from the 2017 Spanish television crime drama Money HeistPart 1 and 2 title cardSpanishLa casa de papel genre crime drama PinaStarring Ersula Corbero Alvaro Morte Itsyar I Itunyaro Pedro Alonso Paco Tus Alba Flores Miguel Erran Jaime Lorente Esther Asebo Enrique Arcaza Darco Perich Kiti Hukerian Rodrigo de la Serna Najwa Nimri Luca Happens Cecilia KrullCompozer (s) Manel Santisteban Ivan Martinez Lakamara Country Origin Seasons2 (4 parts) episodes31 (episode list)ProductionExectoral producer (s) Lex Pina Sonia Martinez Jesus Colmenar Esther Martinez Lobato Nacho Manubens Production Place (s) Spain Italy Thailand Panama CinemaMig AmoedoEditor (s) David Pe Luis Miguel Gonz Bedmar Veronica Callon Spalon Raul Mora Regino Hernandez Raquel Marraco Patricia Rubio Camera setSingle-cameraRunning time67-77 minutes (Antena 3)41-59 minutes (Netflix)Production company (s) Atresmedia Vancouver Media DistributorAntena3 Televisi'nNetflixReleaseReginal Network Antena 3 (2017) Netflix (2019-present) Image format1080p (16:9 HDTV) 4K (16:9 UHDTV) Audio format5.1 volume soundOrigin release2 May 2017 (2017-05-02) - presentInsive linksWebsite La casa de papel wordmark Money Heist (Spanish: La casa de papel, House of Paper) - Spanish TV series, created by Olex Pina. The series traces two long-trained heists led by a professor (Alvaro Morte), one at the Royal Mint of Spain, and one at the Bank of Spain. The series was originally intended as a limited series, which will be narrated in two parts. It had its initial launch of 15 episodes on the Spanish network Antena 3 from May 2, 2017 to November 23, 2017. Netflix acquired the rights to global streaming at the end of 2017. He shortened the series to 22 short episodes and released them worldwide, starting with the first part on December 20, 2017, and the second part on April 6, 2018. In April 2018, Netflix extended the series with a significantly increased new episodes of everything. Part 3 with eight episodes was released on July 19, 2019. Part 4, also with eight episodes, was released on April 3, 2020. A documentary featuring producers and actors premiered on Netflix on the same day, titled Money Heist: Phenomenon (Spanish: La casa de Papel: El Fenemeno). In July 2020, Netflix renewed the show for the fifth and final installment. The series was filmed in Madrid, Spain. Much of Part 3 and 4 were also filmed in Panama, Thailand and Italy (Florence). The narrative is told in real time as fashion and draws on memories, time jumps, ulterior character motifs, and an unreliable narrator for complexity. The series undermines the genre of robbery when it is spoken from the point of view of a woman, Tokyo (Ersula Corber), and having a strong Spanish identity, where emotional dynamics compensates for the ideal strategic crime. The series has won several awards, including best drama series at the 46th International Emmy Awards, as well as critical acclaim for complex plot, interpersonal drama, directing and for attempting to innovate Spanish television. Italian anti-fascist song Bella ciao, which plays several times throughout the series, has become a summer hit across Europe in 2018. By 2018, the series has become the most popular non-talking series and one of the most popular series in general on Netflix, with a special resonance coming from viewers from the Mediterranean Europe and the Latin world. Premise Set in Madrid, a mysterious man known as The Professor recruits
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