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The daily sports newspaper AMK has been published by the Sözcü Group since June 2012. The name AMK is officially an acronym of Açık Mert Korkusuz (translated: Open, Valiant and Fearless)m but this evoked some controversy, as the acronym is commonly understood to mean a profane phrase in Turkish.
Rank Name Frequency Political alignment Circulation Owner 1 Hürriyet: Daily Mainstream, centre [citation needed]: 341,805 Demirören Group: 2 Sabah: Daily: Right-wing, Pro AKP [4]: 313,142
Zaman (Turkish:, literally "time" or "era"), sometimes stylized as ZAMAN, was a daily newspaper in Turkey. Zaman was a major, high-circulation daily [3] before government seizure on 4 March 2016 (the circulation was around 650,000 as of February 2016 [4]). It was founded in 1986 and was the first Turkish daily to go online in 1995. [5]
Mehmed Şevket Eygi (February 7, 1933 – July 12, 2019) was a Turkish journalist, writer, columnist, [1] [2] conspiracy theorist, [3] [4] and Holocaust denier. [5] Ideologically an Islamist [3] [4] and anti-communist, [6] his columns led to Bloody Sunday in 1969. [6]
Established on 17 January 2007, it was the English-language edition of the Turkish daily Zaman. Today's Zaman included domestic and international coverage, and regularly published topical supplements. Its contributors included cartoonist Cem Kızıltuğ. On 4 March 2016, a state administrator was appointed to run Zaman as well as Today's Zaman. [2]
Azad Zaman (died 2021), Meghalayan Bengali politician; Baby Zaman (1923–2013), Bengali actor and producer; Badar uz Zaman (born 1940), Pakistani classical musician; Badruzzaman Badol (born 1969), Bangladeshi High Court justice; C. B. Zaman (c. 1945–2024), Bangladeshi film director; Daulat Zaman (1947–2002), Bengali cricketer
The French version launched November 2010; the Arabic version, October 2013. Both were founded by the Moroccan journalist Youssef Chmirou. Zamane is the first and only history magazine in Morocco.
The political conflict between the AKP-ruled Turkish government and the Gülen movement of Fethullah Gülen began in 2013.. With similarities in ideology, the AKP and the Gülen Movement have long maintained an alliance, with the latter using their judicial influence to limit opposition from Turkey's secular establishment to the AKP's religious conservatism.