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The Malay Mail is an online newspaper in Kuala Lumpur, Malaysia, first published on 1 December 1896 when Kuala Lumpur was the capital of the then new Federated Malay States, making it the first daily newspaper to appear in the FMS. In December 2018, it ceased printing after 122 years but has continued as a news portal.
New Straits Times – Malaysia (including Georgetown (the state capital of Penang Island), Johor Bahru and Johor Bahru District)'s nationwide Malaysian English-language oldest daily newspaper for Malaysian Malays (includes Johorean Malay and Penangite Malay), Malaysian Chinese (includes Penangite Chinese) and Tamil Malaysians community was officially first established and first published based ...
Newspapers published in Malaysia stubs (15 P) Pages in category "Newspapers published in Malaysia" The following 30 pages are in this category, out of 30 total.
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theSun covers national and international news as well as sports, property, media & marketing and lifestyle & entertainment. It has been redesigned with plenty of news briefs to cater to the reading habits of busy executives - the paper's target audience. theSun weekend was launched in the weekend of 15–16 May 2004, a revamp of its Saturday ...
Daily Express Logo of Daily Express (Malaysia) Type Daily newspaper Format Berliner Publisher Sabah Publishing House Sdn. Bhd Founded 1 March 1963 Political alignment Independent Language English, Malay Headquarters Kota Kinabalu, Sabah, Malaysia Circulation 33,790 (daily) July–December 2013 Website dailyexpress.com.my The Daily Express is an English-language newspaper in Sabah, Malaysia and ...
Utusan Malaysia traces its roots to 1939 when it was first published as Utusan Melayu, with its address at Queen Street, Singapore.It was founded by journalists Yusof Ishak (future President of Singapore) and Abdul Rahim Kajai as a dedicated print owned by native Malayan Malays back when the Malay-language newspaper industry was dominated by Jawi Peranakans and Arabs (like the Alsagoffs).
For its first story, Malaysiakini posted a report on 20 November 1999 criticising the practices of Sin Chew Daily, Malaysia's largest-circulation Chinese-language newspaper. It reported that Sin Chew Daily had doctored a photograph of Malaysia's ruling party to remove the image of former deputy prime minister Anwar Ibrahim, who then had ...