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Kashmir Observer is an Indian newspaper published from Srinagar in Jammu and Kashmir since 1996. [1] [2] Sajjad Haider, a past president of Kashmir Editors Guild, is its editor-in-chief. [3] [4] Besides the print and online formats, its stories are republished by other media outlets. [5] [6]
Lahore 1989 Weekly newspaper 20 Bayan [4] Daily Urdu Peshawar 2017 21 The Frontier Post: English Peshawar, Quetta and Lahore 1985 22 The Nation [5] Lahore, Karachi, and Islamabad 1986 23 The News International: Karachi, Lahore, Islamabad/Rawalpindi and London 1991 24 Pakistan Observer: Islamabad, Karachi, Lahore, Peshawar, Muzaffarabad and ...
A Press Council of India report in 2017 titled "Media and Media Scenario of J&K" in 2017 stated that newspapers and periodical approved by the government of Jammu and Kashmir in which government-sponsored advertisements are released is 467, with 146 of them being on the DAVP panel [clarification needed].
Sajjad Haider (Kashmiri: سجاد حيدرانصارى; born 1966) is an Indian journalist and media personality from Jammu and Kashmir who has been in the field of journalism since the 1990s. He is also publisher and editor-in-chief of the Kashmir Observer, a daily newspaper being published from Srinagar since 1996. [1]
Pakistan Observer is an English-language daily newspaper of Pakistan. It is published from six cities – Islamabad , [ 1 ] Karachi , Lahore , Peshawar , Quetta and Muzaffarabad . [ 2 ] [ 3 ] The newspaper was founded in 1988 by Zahid Malik .
Jammu and Kashmir's leading English daily newspaper Daily Excelsior termed the book a "masterly narrative of Kashmir conflict and identity profile of Jammu Muslims". [19] The Friday Times of Lahore said "Zafar's book in itself is the first of its kind, as successive historians only made passing references to the Jammu massacre.
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The newspaper was named after Maharaja Ranbir Singh. [4] The first issue of Ranbir was published on 24 June 1924. [4] [5] Ranbir would become the first daily newspaper in Jammu and Kashmir. [2] The newspaper was printed at the Government Press. [6] Instantly after its foundation, the paper gained a wide readership in the state. [5]