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Hamshahri Building in Karaj-Tehran road. In 1997's Iranian presidential election, Hamshahri newspaper, then run by former mayor of Tehran, Gholamhossein Karbaschi, was accused by conservatives of supporting Mohammad Khatami. This was seen as illegal, as papers receiving government subsidy were forbidden to take sides in the elections.
The Hamshahri Corpus (Persian: پیکره همشهری) is a sizable Persian corpus based on the Iranian newspaper Hamshahri, one of the first online Persian-language newspapers in Iran. It was initially collected and compiled by Ehsan Darrudi at DBRG Group [ 1 ] of University of Tehran .
Newspapers, Tehran, 2011. The first Iranian newspapers appeared in the mid-19th century during the reign of Naser al-Din Shah. [1] More specifically, the first newspaper in Iran, Kaghaz-e Akhbar (The Newspaper), was launched for the government by Mirza Saleh Shirazi in 1837. [2]
International Holocaust Cartoon Contest was a 2006 cartoon competition, sponsored by the Iranian newspaper Hamshahri, to denounce what it called Western "double standards on freedom of speech". The event was staged in response to the Jyllands-Posten Muhammad cartoons controversy . [ 1 ]
Download as PDF; Printable version; ... He is also editor-in-chief of Hamshahri newspaper. [4] He was previously editor-in-chief of local based Tehran Emrooz ...
The quality of Hamshahri corpus is improved for language modeling purpose by a series of tokenization and spell-checking steps. TMC comprises more than 250 million words. The total number of unique words (with frequency of two or more) of the corpus is about 300 thousand, which is relatively good for a highly-inflectional language like Persian.
[4] He started the first Iranian full colour newspaper, Hamshahri when he was the mayor of Tehran. Karbaschi was one of the key supporters of President Mohammad Khatami's first presidential election campaign which led to Khatami's landslide victory (1997). After Khatami's victory, a power struggle started within the political establishment of ...
In 1992, Atrianfar was appointed by Gholamhossein Karbaschi, to be the editor-in-chief of the newspaper Hamshahri. [3] He was replaced in 2003 by Alireza Sheikh-Attar, who was appointed by Mahmoud Ahmadinejad, the then, new mayor of Tehran. [4] He was the publisher of another reformist newspaper, Shargh, until 2006. [5]