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This list of newspapers currently being published in the Philippines includes broadsheets and tabloids published daily and distributed nationwide. Regional newspapers or those published in the regions are also included.
This is a list of newspapers published in Metro Manila. Metro Manila has four major English-language daily papers: the Manila Bulletin, The Manila Times, the Philippine Daily Inquirer, and The Philippine Star. [1] [2]
The newspaper ended its print edition in December 2021 due to the COVID-19 pandemic in the Philippines, leaving the online edition as its sole format, [6] although the print edition resumed production on October 1, 2022. [7] Production was hauled for a second time in November 2023, but then resumed again on September 1, 2024. [8]
January 4 – President Duterte signs Republic Act No. 11510, institutionalizing the alternative learning system (ALS). [2] [3]January 18 – The Department of National Defense announces its unilateral termination of its 1989 accord with the University of the Philippines which took effect three days earlier over claims that the New People's Army is recruiting members in the universities' campuses.
The Daily Tribune, as it was called then, was founded on February 1, 2000, by a group of journalists from the then-defunct The Philippine Post led by then-Editor-in-Chief and Founding Chairman Ninez Cacho-Olivares. On June 1, 2018, Concept and Information Group, publisher of the online Concept News Central, acquired the paper from Cacho ...
This article appears in the October/November 2024: Asia issue of Fortune with the headline "Unlocking mobile banking for Filipinos." More from the October/November issue of Fortune :
The newspaper's name was derived from the Filipino word that means "free". In 1981, Malaya was founded by Jose Burgos, Jr. [ 3 ] as a weekly, and later daily written in the Tagalog language . It eventually began publishing content in English language in 1983, when President Ferdinand Marcos closed down WE Forum , a sister publication of Malaya .
It was then the sister newspaper of Manila Times under the Gokongwei family who acquired the broadsheet in 1989 from the Roces family. The tabloid's first head office was located at the Manila Times Compound in Quezon City before it was relocated to Mandaluyong. English was primarily used in its articles until they shifted to Tagalog in the 2000s.