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Below is a list of newspapers published in Qatar. [1] Al Arab – Arabic daily; Al Raya – Arabic daily; Al Sharq – Arabic daily; Al Watan – Arabic daily; Lusail – Arabic daily; Gulf Times – English; The Peninsula – English; Qatar Chronicle – English; Qatar Tribune – English; Vartamanam – Malayalam daily; Gulf Madhyamam ...
Qatar's first weekly newspaper, Gulf News, appeared in 1969. [5] Al Arab was the first post-independence newspaper to appear in Qatar, in 1972. [6] Gulf Times was the first English newspaper in Qatar [7] until the arrival of The Peninsula in 1996. [8] [9]
The Gulf Times newspaper has been founded in 1978 as the first publication of the Gulf Publishing and Printing Company in the capital city of Qatar, Doha (or ad-Dawhah). [1] [2] It is one of three English language newspapers in the country (the others being The Peninsula [1995] and the Qatar Tribune [2006]).
The Youth Employment Initiative in Qatar, Al Amal Bil Amaal, was started by Silatech to help young men and women in Qatar get jobs. This project is based on the Qatar National Vision 2030, which tries to balance economic and social growth for all Qataris by investing in them and making sure that everyone gets care, attention, and justice. The ...
Al Raya was launched by Gulf company for printing and publishing as a weekly newspaper on 10 May 1979. [3] [4] The company which was founded by Ali bin Jaber Al Thani also owns Gulf Times, an English-language daily. [3] [5] Based in Doha, [6] Al Raya is the second Arabic newspaper published in Qatar. [7]
Nepalese workers in Qatar are forced to work 10- to 14-hour work days, often in extreme heat, with four hours of sleep, and live in cramped accommodations with poor sanitation. Many have gone into debt just to get to Qatar and frequently have to work overtime to make ends meet. Some make only one-third of the money that they are initially promised.
This ended the forced labour scheme in Qatar and improved the migrant workers’ living and work conditions, regardless of their nationality. In 2020, Qatar became the second country in the Gulf region to set a minimum wage for migrant workers, after Kuwait. [21]
This, in turn, advanced migration from India to the Persian Gulf, especially Indian civil servants who would manage the relations between the Gulf and India. [12] Based on the works of J.G. Lorimer (1908) and Al-Shaybani (1962), the population of migrants in Qatar before the 1930s can be classified as Arabs, Persians, Baluchis, Indians, and ...