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It is a popular daily and nationwide newspaper that is distributed in all provinces of Iran." Salam: 1991 Sarmayeh [42] Persian "Centrist...Economic paper run by a former head of the Tehran Stock Exchange, and shut down in October 2009" [19] Shargh: 2003 Persian "Pro-reform" [18] Sobh-eqtesad [43] Persian Taban: Persian Tehran Emrooz
Alavitabar is a member of Islamic Iran Participation Front and was the editor of the now closed Sobh-e-Emrooz newspaper. [2] In the 1990s, Alireza Alavitabar rose to prominence as a result of his journalistic work and reflections on the politics of the Second Khordad Reform Movement during Khatami's presidency. [1] [3]
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Sobh-e-No was established in May 2016. Farshad Mahdipour is the proprietor of the newspaper, he is also the editor-in-chief of it. He describes Sobh-e-No's policy as a media which tries to give logical analyses about Islamic revolutionary values and while reflects the latest domestic and the world's news, has an effort to present analytical comments about the ongoing political issues.
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Mehdi Nasiri (Persian: مهدی نصیری; born 1963) is an Iranian journalist and writer, currently serving as the editor-in-chief of the publication Samat (سمات).His career includes previous roles as the editor-in-chief and managing director of the weekly Sobh (صبح) and the daily newspaper Kayhan.
Former editor-in-chief of the "Sobh Iran" newspaper, Nasser Anghata, writes: Heydar Raqabi (Haleh), who led the "Soldiers of the National Front" organization before August 28, and was a staunch nationalist, was chosen as the head of the Committee for the Resistance Movement at Tehran University.
Abbas Yari (Persian: عباس ياری) is an iranian journalist and film critic. [1] He was born in Arak in 1951. He graduated as a cameraman at the Superior School of Cinema in 1975. Abbas Yari started his professional career as a journalist, and worked until 1981 for the newspapers Sobh e Emrouz, Tehran Mosavvar and Kayhan.