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Daily Awam (Urdu: روزنامہ عوام) was an Urdu daily newspaper in Pakistan. It was a morning daily published by Jang Group. The Daily Awam Quetta was the third largest circulating newspaper in the whole province of Balochistan, Pakistan which is the largest province (by area) of Pakistan. It published from Islamabad, Quetta and Hub.
International and regional news 14 Daily Nai Baat [4] Urdu Lahore, Karachi, Multan, Peshawar, Quetta 2011 Current/political 15 Daily Sarhad (Urdu: سرحد) Peshawar 1970 16 Business Recorder: English Karachi, Islamabad and Lahore 1965 Pakistan's first financial newspaper 17 Daily Times: Lahore, Karachi, Islamabad 2002 18 Dawn [5]
Awam (Urdu: روزنامہ عوام) is an Urdu language daily newspaper based in Karachi, Pakistan. [1] This newspaper was started in 1994. [2] It is an evening daily newspaper published by Jang Group of Newspapers. The Sindhi version of Awam is the most circulated newspaper in interior Sindh.
Awami Awaz (Sindhi: روزاني عوامي آواز) is a Sindhi daily newspaper and news TV channel in Pakistan. It's published from Karachi . [ 1 ] The current chief editor of the newspaper is Jabbar Khattak.
The News International Daily News Daily Awam: ISSN: 1563-8731 (print) 1563-8723 (web) OCLC number: 1781424 : ... Rawalpindi, Quetta, Multan and London. [6] References
Now it's a cricket channel which is scrambled and not free for viewers on satellite. Another channel for sports is in pipeline since February 2016. PTV World – 24-hour SD English News and Current affairs channel. Started as PTV-2 in 1992 as first satellite channel of Pakistan, was given a new name of PTV World in 1998 later and went off air ...
Daily Jang - original flagship newspaper of the Group in the Urdu language. Group Editor: Mehmood Sham in Karachi. Newspaper editions are issued in Karachi, Lahore, Rawalpindi, Peshawar, Multan and London, with the largest daily circulation in Pakistan among Urdu newspapers [5] The News International - daily newspaper in English started in 1991
A pivotal moment in the history of television in Pakistan occurred in the year 2002 with the liberalisation of the media industry. [6] This transformative development marked a departure from the previously tightly controlled landscape, ushering in a new era of diversity, competition, and expanded opportunities for broadcasters. [7]