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Sudan Vision was a progovernment paper with a daily circulation of about 3,200 copies. The Citizen supported the views of the SPLM and distributed about 2,000 copies per day. The Sudan Tribune was an Internet paper from Paris that tended to be critical of the NPC. [4] In 2008 the NPC suspended the publishing license of both the Citizen and ...
According to Sudan Memory's website, available in English and Arabic, its activities relate to the history and culture of Sudan. This has been achieved through cooperation between Sudanese and British organizations with the aim of organizing, archiving and thereby safeguarding documents and other media in danger of being lost.
The National Records Office of Sudan, located in Khartoum, serves as the National Archives of Sudan. It holds 20 million documents and 13,000 volumes about the history of Sudan since 1870. [1] Since 2018, the National Records Office has been a leading partner of the online archive and cultural heritage project Sudan Memory.
This is a list of newspapers in Sudan. It comprises both daily newspapers as well as general news magazines , published both by Sudanese journalists working in Sudan and abroad, in print and/or online version.
Al Sahafa was established in 1961. [3] In its initial phase the paper had a left-wing political stance. [3] The paper was suspended in different periods, including in 2003 because it carried an Ethiopian Airlines advertisement that mentioned the drinking of alcohol.
During the war the syndicate has been vocal against the deliberate targeting of journalists by rival military factions. [5] [15] [16] [17] The SJS reported on 10 August that 13 newspapers had ceased operations due to the conflict, while FM radio stations and channels also halted broadcasts, with journalists grappling with unpaid wages. [18]
Sudan Notes and Records was founded in 1918. Until 1952, it was the only regularly-published journal in the Anglo-Egyptian Sudan. [1] [note 1] The idea for the journal was suggested by the Director of Survey, Lt. Col. Milo Talbot, to Edgar Bonham-Carter (later Sir), then the Legal Secretary of the Sudan government. [2]
The National Archive of South Sudan is located in Juba, South Sudan. The collection consists of tens of thousands of Sudanese and Southern Sudanese government documents running from the early 1900s , through the independence of Sudan in 1956 and Sudan's First (1955–1972) and Second (1983–2005) civil wars, to the late 1990s. [ 1 ]