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Journalist Charles Glass argues that An-Nahar is Lebanon's equivalent of The New York Times. [12] The New York Times and Time have called it "the newspaper of record for the entire Arab world". [1] [2] Now defunct Lebanese daily As-Safir was cited as the rival of An-Nahar. [13] In the mid-1990s the latter was described as a moderate and right ...
1 January – New Year's Day; 6 January – Epiphany and Armenian Christmas; 9 February – St. Maroun Day; 25 March – Annunciation Day; 30 March – Eid al-Fitr; 18 April – Good Friday; 20 April – Easter Sunday; 1 May – Labour Day; 25 May – Liberation and Resistance Day; 6 June – Eid al-Adha; 26 June – Islamic New Year; 15 August ...
An Nahar that was started on 4 August 1933 as a 4-page tabloid was published by Gebran Tueni as its editor-in-chief and he continued at the head of the influential newspaper until his sudden death in 1948, when editing was taken over by his son Ghassan Tueni, also a prominent journalist, politician, ambassador, and later on Lebanese government ...
Hadiqat al-Akhbar (The News Garden in English) is the first daily newspaper of Lebanon which was launched in 1858. [1] From 1858 to 1958 there were nearly 200 newspapers in the country. [2] Prior to 1963 the number of newspapers was more than 400. [3] However, the number reduced to 53 due to the 1963 press law. [3] [4]
She was a member of the Lebanese Parliament for almost ten years (2009–2018), representing the district of Achrafieh. Tueni is the CEO of one of Lebanon's most famous newspapers, An-Nahar. [1] Tueni is a fourth generation journalist. An Nahar was established by her great-grandfather, Gebran Tueni, in 1933.
Although the text of the agreement was never published, an unofficial text appeared in the Lebanese daily newspaper An-Nahar on 20 April 1970. [1] The agreement established principles under which the presence and activities of Palestinian guerrillas in southeastern Lebanon would be tolerated and regulated by the Lebanese authorities.
In the same study it was also found that the paper was the second most popular paper in Lebanon after An Nahar. [16] The Ipsos study in 2006 revealed that Al-Balad had the largest rate of subscribers with 23.8% whereas An Nahar had only 2.6%. [16] The paper was also found to have the highest circulation in Lebanon in 2006. [16]
Gebran Ghassan Tueni (Arabic: جبران تويني ; 15 September 1957 – 12 December 2005) was a Lebanese politician and the former editor and publisher of daily paper An Nahar, established by his grandfather, also named Gebran Tueni, in 1933. He was assassinated in 2005 [1] as part of a series of assassinations of Syria's critics in ...