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Newspaper Language City Average issue readership [6] 2019 (in millions) Owner 1 Dainik Jagran: Hindi: Various cities and states 16.872 Jagran Prakashan Limited: 2 Dainik Bhaskar: Hindi: Various cities and states 15.566 D B Corp Ltd. 3 Hindustan: Hindi: Various cities and states 13.213 HT Media: 4 Amar Ujala: Hindi: Various cities and states 9. ...
The 2019 Indian Readership Survey reported that with 9.65 million it had the 4th-largest daily readership amongst newspapers in India. [4] Amar Ujala was founded in Agra in 1948. [5] [6] In 1994, Amar Ujala, along with another Hindi daily, shared nearly 70 per cent of the Hindi newspaper readership in the state of Uttar Pradesh.
Parda chaak is a weekly news publication being regularly published from Lahore Pakistan. 54 Daily Ausaf: Daily Urdu Lahore, Karachi, Peshawar, Europe, Kashmir, Gilgit-Baltistan 1997 Its chief editor is Mehtab Khan. Daily Ausaf was inaugurated on 25 December 1997 from Islamabad 55 Daily Aaj: Peshawar, Abbottabad 1989 Editor-in-chief: A.W. Yousfi 56
India has the second-largest newspaper market in the world, with daily newspapers reporting a combined circulation of over 240 million copies as of 2018. [ 2 ] [ 3 ] There are publications produced in each of the 22 scheduled languages of India and in many of the other languages spoken throughout the country .
Newspaper services in the city include Amar Ujala, [233] Dainik Jagran, Hindustan Times, The Times of India and Dainik Bhaskar. The Pioneer newspaper, headquartered in Lucknow and started in 1865, is the second-oldest English-language newspaper in India still in production. [ 234 ]
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Daily Mashriq was founded in 1963 by Inayat Ullah Khan. [3] Its name translates to 'East' in Urdu. [1]In 1964, the newspaper was nationalized by the military regime of Ayub Khan and subsequently, it became part of the National Press Trust (NPT), which was established to manage nationalized independent newspapers in order to deter free media. [1]
The founder, chief editor and publisher, Rehmat Shah Afridi, has been termed a "prisoner of conscience" by Amnesty International due to his longstanding struggle for democracy and media freedom in Pakistan; [5] Afridi was arrested in 1999. [6] Jalil Afridi had been running The Frontier Post as its Managing Editor since 1999. [citation needed]