Search results
Results From The WOW.Com Content Network
Online daily English Zimbabwe Daily News: 2004 Private Online daily English Zimbabwe Independent: Harare: Private Weekly English The Zimbabwe Mail: 2003 Harare: Private Daily English Zimbabwe Metro: 2007 Gaborone, Botswana Private Online daily English Zimbabwe Telegraph: 2008 Private Daily English Zimbabwe Tribune: 2009 Private Online daily ...
The Daily News is a Zimbabwean independent newspaper published in Harare. It was founded in 1999 by Geoffrey Nyarota, a former editor of the Bulawayo Chronicle. Bearing the motto "Telling it like it is", the Daily News swiftly became Zimbabwe's most popular newspaper. However, the paper also suffered two bombings, allegedly by Zimbabwean ...
Zimbabwe Daily News is an internet newspaper published in Zimbabwe and UK. The newspaper was first published independently in 2004 and is owned by 3MG Media. The newspaper was first published independently in 2004 and is owned by 3MG Media.
The Southern Times, a regional newspaper in Southern Africa, is published as a joint venture between Zimpapers and New Era Newspapers of Namibia. [3] Zimpapers is headquartered at Herald House in Harare and maintains offices in Harare, Bulawayo, Mutare, and Gweru, with bureaux located across Zimbabwe. [3]
Zimbabwe Daily News; Zimbabwe Independent; Zimbabwe Metro; Zimbabwe Telegraph; Zimbabwe Tribune This page was last edited on 7 June 2020, at 23:45 (UTC). Text is ...
The name Zimbabwe was officially adopted concurrently with Britain's grant of independence in April 1980. Prior to that point, the country had been called Southern Rhodesia from 1898 to 1964 (or 1980, according to British law), Rhodesia from 1964 to 1979, and Zimbabwe Rhodesia between June and December 1979. Since Zimbabwean independence in ...
Nyarota was born in Southern Rhodesia (today Zimbabwe) to middle-class black parents in 1951. He later received a university education. [2] He initially trained as a teacher—stating later that "in colonial Rhodesia the only job open to educated Africans was teaching" [3] —and was posted at Inyanga in the country's east.
The newspaper's origins date back to the 19th century. Its forerunner was launched on 27 June 1891 by William Fairbridge [1] for the Argus group of South Africa. Named the Mashonaland Herald and Zambesian Times, it was a weekly, hand-written news sheet produced using the cyclostyle duplicating process.