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"Democratic Republic of Congo Profile: Media". BBC News. 4 May 2011. "Democratic Republic of the Congo". Electronic Newspapers of Africa. Virtual Libraries: African Studies. New York, USA: Columbia University Libraries. Karen Fung, African Studies Association (ed.). "News (by country): Congo-Kinshasa". Africa South of the Sahara. USA – via ...
Pages in category "Newspapers published in the Democratic Republic of the Congo" The following 4 pages are in this category, out of 4 total. This list may not reflect recent changes .
' The Future ') is a daily newspaper published in Kinshasa in the Democratic Republic of the Congo. The company is part of the Groupe L'Avenir, a media group of the DRC. The content of the paper is primarily French, and includes content written in Lingala and Swahili.
KINSHASA (Reuters) -The leader of an attempted coup on Sunday in the Democratic Republic of Congo (DRC) has been killed and some 50 people including three American citizens arrested, a spokesman ...
In 2009, the freedom of the press global ranking released each year by Reporters Without Borders ranked the Democratic Republic of the Congo at 146 out of 175 countries. [4] [5] There are several organizations monitoring freedom of the press in the Democratic Republic of the Congo: Union nationale de la presse congolaise; Journaliste en danger
Le Potentiel is a Democratic Republic of the Congo daily newspaper published by award-winning journalist Modeste Mutinga. [1] The Committee to Protect Journalists described it as "the only independent daily newspaper in the war-torn Democratic Republic of Congo". [1]
L'Avenir (France), a short lived Liberal Catholic newspaper published in France in the 1830s; L'Avenir (Belgian newspaper), a French-language newspaper published in Namur, Belgium; L'Avenir (Congolese newspaper), a French-language newspaper published in Kinshasa, the Democratic Republic of the Congo; L'Avenir, magazine published in Tonkin, Vietnam
Even Pointe-Noire, the second largest city and the country's economic capital, does not have its own local newspaper. Internet access is very limited, and most citizens have no access to computers in any case. [2] The public radio and television broadcaster in the Republic of the Congo is Radiodiffusion Television Congolaise. Private radio and ...