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The Malta Independent is a national newspaper published daily in Malta. It was started in 1992. [ 1 ] The paper publishes an online version branded as Malta Independent Online .
The Malta Independent, The Malta Independent on Sunday: Daily: English: 1992: Standard Publications: Nationalist Party: Times of Malta, Sunday Times of Malta: Daily: English: 1935: Allied Newspapers: Nationalist Party: Established in 1929 as Times of Malta Weekly: Malta Today, Malta Today on Sunday: Biweekly: English: 1999: Media Today: Malta ...
Pages in category "English-language newspapers published in Malta" The following 6 pages are in this category, out of 6 total. ... The Malta Independent;
Caruana Galizia was employed by The Sunday Times of Malta as a news reporter in 1987, [1] becoming a regular columnist from 1990 to 1992 and again from 1993 to 1996. She was an associate editor of The Malta Independent in 1992, [7] and remained a columnist with that newspaper and The Malta Independent on Sunday for the rest of
The Independent (London), an online daily newspaper, formerly a print publication founded in 1986; The Malta Independent, a Maltese paper and online newspaper founded in 1992; The Independent, published in Dhaka, Bangladesh from 1995 to 2022; The Independent, published in Footscray, Victoria, Australia from 1883 to 1933
Muscat wrote a regular column in L-Orizzont, [23] a Maltese-language newspaper published by the General Workers' Union, as well as its sister Sunday weekly It-Torċa; [23] he was a regular contributor to the independent newspaper The Times of Malta. [23]
The Journal de Malte, a newspaper which was published during the French occupation of Malta in 1798, is regarded as the predecessor of the Malta Government Gazette. [2] [3] After British rule was established in Malta in 1800, a number of newspapers were published by the government under different titles: Foglio d'Avvisi (1803–1804), L'Argo (1804), Il Cartaginese (1804–1805) and the ...
The most widely read and financially the strongest newspapers are published by Allied Newspapers Ltd., mainly The Times of Malta (27 percent) and its Sunday edition The Sunday Times of Malta (51.6 percent). [citation needed] Due to bilingualism half of the newspapers are published in English and the other half in Maltese.