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Al Watan was launched on 1 September 2000 by Assir Establishment for Press and Publishing. [6] [8] Al Watan is said to be influenced by the perspectives of Khalid Al Faisal, who initiated the idea of establishing a national newspaper that reflects the pulse and lifestyle of Saudi Arabia, and seeks to engage a mass audience across all regions of the Kingdom. [9]
Al-Watan, a Kuwaiti Arabic-language defunct daily published by the Al Watan publishing house; Al-Watan Daily, a daily English-language newspaper published in Kuwait; Alwatan, an Arabic daily newspaper published in Oman; Al Watan, a Hamas-owned newspaper shut down by Palestinian authorities in 1996
Al-Watan was founded in 1995 [3] and was the first newspaper to be launched in Qatar after the Emir, Sheikh Hamad bin Khalifa Al Thani, abolished press censorship. [4] Its parent company is Dar Al Watan Printing, Publishing and Distribution Company WLL.
In September, the Syrian newspaper Al-Watan reported comments from Russian Foreign Minister Sergey Lavrov, who said Ukrainian intelligence emissaries in Idlib, in Syria's northwest, were ...
Al Watan was launched in 2006. [3] [4] The paper is published by the Syrian Arab Publishing and Distributing Company.It is the country's first private daily newspaper since the 1960s (not counting the state party organ Al-Baath), but its editorial line and reporting is practically identical to that of the public-owned papers. [2]
Watan (Arabic: صحيفة وطن يغرد خارج السرب) is a weekly Arab-American newspaper [1] [2] [3] published by Watan News LLC. [4] It was founded in Washington, D.C., in 1990 by journalist Nezam Mahdawi.
The newspaper's editor-in-chief at the time was Nasr Ibn Mohammed al-Taei. It ceased publication and moved to Cairo, Egypt, after the Lebanese Civil War; it later moved to Kuwait City, Kuwait. [1] [2] When Mohammed Ibn Suleiman al-Taei became editor-in-chief, he immediately started planning to expand and make Alwatan a daily newspaper. He hired ...
Al-Watan was one of the most important opposition periodicals published in the Palestinian Authority (PA)-controlled areas. PA officials used the ambiguity of the 1995 Palestinian press law and control over granting news licenses to temper criticism and silence opposition voices, including al-Watan.