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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 Dawn Group's evening newspaper; now defunct 29 The Statesman: Peshawar 2002 30 ...
Early newspapers in Gujarati are published from Bombay and they covered commercial and business news chiefly. They were mainly published by Parsi community and served area of Bombay (now Mumbai). On 1 July 1822, the first Gujarati newspaper Bombayna Samachar was started by Fardunjee Marzban as a weekly business journal with 150 subscribers.
Millat (Gujarati: મિલ્લત, Urdu: ملت) or Daily Millat is a bilingual Gujarati and Urdu daily founded in 1948 by Fakhre Matari and based in Karachi, Sindh, Pakistan. After him his son Inquilab Matari managed the newspaper. It is edited by Shumaila Matari Daud. [1] It is one of the two Gujarati newspapers published from Karachi ...
NavGujarat Samay is a Gujarati language broadsheet daily newspaper from The Times Group. It was launched in Ahmedabad , India on 16 January 2014 to cater to vernacular language readers of Gujarat . [ 1 ]
Pakistan has around 300 privately owned daily newspapers. According to the Pakistan Bureau of Statistics (formerly the Federal Bureau of Statistics), they had a combined daily sale of 6.1 million copies in 2009. Television is the main source of news and information for people in Pakistan's towns, cities and large areas of the countryside.
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 .
Associated Press of Pakistan (APP) (Urdu: مشارکتِ مطبع ، پاکستان) is a government-operated national news agency of Pakistan. [ 2 ] [ 3 ] [ 4 ] APP has News Exchange Agreements with 37 Foreign News Agencies and has "around 400 editorial staff including around 100 Correspondents at the District and Tehsil levels".
This was the first newspaper of Pakistan that came in a colored form. He suffered many hardships and was put behind the bars due to some clashes with the government for some time. The newspaper was then handed over to Mujeeb ur Rehman Shami. Prior to taking over Daily Pakistan, he was Editor-in-Chief of the Weekly Zindagi, Lahore.