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Sister newspapers. Baladna (Syria) Website. www.albaladonline.com. Al-Balad (Arabic: البلد, lit. 'The Country') officially Sada Al-Balad (Arabic: صدى البلد, lit. 'The Echo of the Country') was an Arabic-language daily newspaper in Lebanon. [1] It was headquartered in Beirut [2] and was published as a tabloid commercial paper.
List of newspapers in Lebanon. Hadiqat al-Akhbar (The News Garden in English) is the first daily newspaper of Lebanon which was launched in 1858. [1] From 1858 to 1958 there were nearly 200 newspapers in the country. [2] Prior to 1963 the number of newspapers was more than 400. [3] However, the number reduced to 53 due to the 1963 press law. [3][4]
However, it was the second most circulated daily with 12.6% in the Biqa region after Sada Al Balad which had 12.7% of the daily circulation. [36] In Mount Lebanon Al Anwar was the fifth daily, having 38.4% of the daily circulation, whereas in southern Lebanon it was the third with 15.2% of the daily circulation. [36]
Alrai Alaam. Al Amal (Lebanon) Al Anwar (Lebanese newspaper) Ararad (daily) Ayk (daily) Aztag.
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Circulation. 45,000 (2012) Website. www.annahar.com. An-Nahar (Arabic: النهار, lit. 'The Day or The Morning') is a leading Arabic-language daily newspaper published in Lebanon. In the 1980s, An-Nahar was described by The New York Times and Time Magazine as the newspaper of record for the entire Arab world. [1][2]
Cars choked Lebanon's highways as people fled into the night, trying to escape north toward the capital Beirut. "It was a day of terror," 41-year-old housewife Thuraya Harb told AFP at a makeshift ...
Arabic. Headquarters. Beirut, Lebanon. Website. Ad Diyar. Ad-Diyar (Arabic: الديار, lit. 'The Home') is an Arabic -language daily newspaper published in Beirut, Lebanon, which has been in circulation since 1941.