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There were about 170 newspapers prior to the Panchyat era and after the abolishment of Rana rule. Some of them are: Awaj was the first daily newspaper of Nepal. It was published in Falgun 8, 2007 BS, just one day after the establishment of democracy.
Hamro Sansaar (1961-1962). Nepali Monthly Journal published from Calcutta. Maalingo (1964-1966). Nepali Literary Journal published by; Nepali Sahitya Sammelan, Darjeeling. Hamro Patrika (2009-2010). Nepali Monthly Journal published from Siliguri. Sunchari Samachar (1993-2007). Nepali News daily published from Siliguri. Himalaya Darpan (2008-2013).
Hamro Patro Listen ⓘ is a freemium Nepali calendar app for smartphones. [1] As of 2024, it had been downloaded more than ten million times. It provides additional features including news, horoscope, foreign exchange rates, podcasts and Nepali FM radio stations.
It was established in 1961 (2018 BS) under the Rastriya Samachar Samiti Act, 2019 BS, merging two privately owned news agencies with a view to facilitating newspapers and broadcast media. With the development of news media in Nepal, subscribers of RSS have reached more than 100 newspapers, radio, online media and television.
Newspapers in all these four languages are available in the Darjeeling Hills region. Of the largely circulated Nepali newspapers Himalay Darpan, Swarnabhumi and some Sikkim-based Nepali newspapers like Hamro Prajashakti and Samay Dainik are read most. [77] The Tibet Mirror was the first Tibetan-language newspaper published in Kalimpong in 1925.
Nepali Times (stylized as NEPALI Times) is an English weekly newspaper that provides reporting and commentary on Nepali politics, business, culture, travel and society in 16 pages. The weekly is aimed at the expatriate, diplomatic and business communities in Kathmandu , and through the internet for the Nepali diaspora .
It started as a daily newspaper in 1981 with Vijayawada as the centre. Currently it is being published with nine centres (or editions) at Hyderabad, Vijayawada, Visakhapatnam, Tirupati, Khammam, Kurnool, Ananthapur, Rajahmundry, Srikakulam, Karimnagar and Ongole. It has a wide network of over 100 primary news-gathering centers across the state.
Annapurna Post (Nepali: अन्नपुर्ण पोस्ट) is a daily broadsheet newspaper published in Nepal. [1] [2] [3] It started printing in 2002 and launched its online news portal in 2013 by Annapurna Media Network, which also owns The Annapurna Express, AP1 TV and Radio Annapurna Nepal.