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Etemad [17] 2002 Persian Etemaad-e Melli Persian "Official newspaper of the National Trust Party" [18] Ettelaat: 1926 English, Persian "Centrist...Iran's oldest daily, moderate, a newspaper of record" [19] Fath: Persian Financial Tribune: 2014 English The only private newspaper in English and also the only non-Persian economic daily in Iran ...
The first edition of Etemad was published in Tehran in 2002. Its chief editor is Behrooz Behzadi. The editorial board of Etemad include journalists, who worked previously in reformist Iranian magazines and newspapers, which were banned by the Iranian judiciary. The paper focuses on political, cultural, social and economic news. [4]
National Trust Party (Persian: حزب اعتماد ملی, romanized: Ḥezb-e Eʿtemād-e Mellī, also translated as National Confidence Party) [5] [6] [7] is an Iranian political party based on a reformist and populist message.
Iran is still conducting indirect nuclear talks with the United States via Oman, Iran's Etemad newspaper on Thursday quoted Iran's acting foreign minister as saying. Ali Bagheri Kani's reported ...
A report by the Tehran newspaper Etemad said authorities had released Niloufar Bayani and Houman Jowkar on Monday night, who were part of a group of five activists convicted in 2019. They were ...
Immediately after the 2005 presidential election Karroubi founded Etemad-e Melli Party, and along with it Etemad-e Melli newspaper. In the 2009 election, he ran as the head of his party. However, many non-party figures also endorsed him. Karroubi was described as "the best-organized" among the main candidates.
Ghouchani then served as the editor-in-chief of Etemad-e Melli, the official organ of National Trust Party led by Mehdi Karroubi. [6] He was also in charge of the women's lifestyle magazine Irandokht, another publication close to Karroubi, until its office was raided in December 2009. [7]
Etemad or Etemaad (Persian: اعتماد, lit. 'Trust'; correct transcription: e'temād, because in the main pronunciation the word has a glottal stop ) is a newspaper in Iran. Etemad , Etemaad , or E'temad may also refer to: