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In April 2012, it published an editorial calling for ending the struggle within the ruling family of Kuwait, Al Sabah. [ 4 ] The paper's editor, Mohammed Al-Sager, is a winner of the International Press Freedom Award of the Committee to Protect Journalists "for courageous reporting on political and human rights issues in the face of government ...
The daily is described as an independent political newspaper with a liberal leaning. [4] The 2012 circulation of the daily was 23,000 copies. [5] In March 2010, the daily was fined 3.000 Kuwait dinars for publishing an article which was deemed by the authorities as offensive to the ruling family, Al Sabah. [6]
On 9 May 2012 the editor-in-chief of the daily was fined 5,000 dinar ($17,550) by the Kuwaiti authorities due to the publication of an article giving the details of the meeting between the Emir and former parliamentarians without taking written approval from the Emiri office in advance.
Liberal/Progressive 1995 SLATE: Liberal: 1996 StreetWise: Progressive 1992 Time: Moderate 1923 Townhall Magazine: Conservative 2008 Washington Examiner: Conservative 2005 Washington Monthly: Liberal 1969 The Week: Moderate 2001 Wired Magazine: Liberal 1993 Z Magazine: Anarchist/Left-Wing 1986 World: Conservative/Christian 1986 World Affairs ...
This week's cover for The New Yorker is making waves on social media as people react to the magazine's illustration.. The image, titled “A Mother’s Work” by R. Kikuo Johnson, gives readers a ...
Of the fifty elected members of Kuwait National Assembly in 2008, two belong to the NDA: Mohammed Al-Abduljader and Mohammed Al-Sager. [1] MP Ali Al-Rashid originally affiliated with the NDA, but left the party on 23 November 2008. [2]
The number of newspapers published reached the peak in 2009, when there were 14 Arabic dailies, three English dailies and a dozens weekly newspapers in Kuwait. [2] But the numbers decreased since then either on account of the 2008 financial crisis and the increase of digital news sources or by government censorship.
Yes, Hollywood is as liberal as everybody says -- 'for better or for worse,' according to Alyssa Milano.