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Karachi, Lahore, Islamabad/Rawalpindi and London 1991 24 Pakistan Observer: Islamabad, Karachi, Lahore, Peshawar, Muzaffarabad and Quetta 1988 25 The Post: Lahore, Islamabad and Karachi 2005 Defunct 26 Khalsa Akhbar Lahore: Punjabi Lahore 1886 Defunct 27 The Regional Times of Sindh [4] English Karachi, Hyderabad – 28 The Star: Karachi 1951
Pakistan Observer is an English-language daily newspaper of Pakistan. It is published from six cities – Islamabad , [ 1 ] Karachi , Lahore , Peshawar , Quetta and Muzaffarabad . [ 2 ] [ 3 ] The newspaper was founded in 1988 by Zahid Malik .
The Pakistan Times (1947–1996) was a Pakistani newspaper, established by Mian Itikharuddin and Faiz Ahmed Faiz through the leftist Progressive Papers Limited. Its headquarters was in Lahore, Pakistan. [1] Later, it started another edition from Rawalpindi. The Rawalpindi edition was later shifted to Islamabad.
Newspaper editions are issued in Karachi, Lahore, Rawalpindi, Peshawar, Multan and London, with the largest daily circulation in Pakistan among Urdu newspapers [5] The News International - daily newspaper in English started in 1991; Akhbar-e-Jahan - a weekly magazine in Urdu started in 1967 [5] MAG - a weekly magazine in English; Daily Awam [5 ...
The News International and its Sunday version The News on Sunday is published by the Jang Group of Newspapers, publisher of the Daily Jang (جنگ), an Urdu language newspaper in Pakistan. [5] Mir Khalil-ur-Rehman was the founder of the newspaper and his younger son, Mir Shakil-ur-Rahman , is the current chief executive officer and editor-in ...
Zahid Malik (October 5, 1937 – September 1, 2016), was a Pakistani journalist, civil servant, and writer, who was the founder and editor-in-chief of Pakistan Observer. [2] [3] He was also the founder-chairman of the think tank '101 Friends of China', a non-governmental organisation aimed towards improving Pak-China ties.
Lakson Group launched Daily Express in 1998 with a novel approach to newspaper distribution in Pakistan, headquartered in Lahore instead of the conventional hub, Karachi. [1] This decision was underpinned by an assertion that Punjab province, with Lahore as its capital, housed more Urdu newspaper readers than Karachi. [ 1 ]
The region, on account of its large Muslim majority, was thus awarded to Pakistan. Rawalpindi's Hindu and Sikh population, who had made up 33.72% and 17.32% of the city, [44] migrated en masse to the newly independent Dominion of India after anti-Hindu and anti-Sikh pogroms in western Punjab, while Muslim refugees from India settled in the city ...