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After independence, the newspaper published reports on Bengali collaborators of the Pakistan Army and war crimes. [4] The reports were used as evidence in the Bangladesh war crimes tribunal. [5] In 1972, Hasan Hafizur Rahman was elected president of the editorial board of the Dainik Bangla. [6]
The Bangladesh Observer, an English-language daily published between 1949-2010 and last edited by Iqbal Sobhan Chowdhury. [7] Kishore Bangla, a Bengali juvenile weekly published between 1977 and 1983. Daily Banglar Bani, a Bengali-language newspaper. The Kohinoor, a Bengali-language monthly published from 1898 to 1912.
(Urdu: گلوبل نیوز ) Urdu / English All Pakistan 1992 International and regional news 13 BOL News (Urdu: بول نیوز) Urdu / English All Pakistan 2013 International and regional news 14 Daily Nai Baat [4] Urdu Lahore, Karachi, Multan, Peshawar, Quetta 2011 Current/political 15 Daily Sarhad (Urdu: سرحد) Peshawar 1970 16 Business ...
Daily Qaumi Bandhan (Bengali: দৈনিক কওমি বন্ধন; lit. "national unity" [22]) was a Bengali language newspaper published in Karachi, Sindh, Pakistan. It has the reputation of being the only main Bengali newspaper in the country that catered specifically to the large Bengali community in Pakistan.
In 2014, during clashes in Satkhira, Inqilab reported that Indian forces had been deployed in Satkhira to quell the protestors. [2] The report detailed an alleged fax, dated 6 November 2013, from the between foreign ministry in Dhaka and the Bangladesh high commission in Delhi, requesting Indian troop presence in Satkhira. [3]
Sajjan was an experiment to make a way for later Punjabi newspapers in Pakistan, it was estimated that newspaper will be defunct in 3 or 6-month but news paper survived for more than year and defunct in 1990. Sajjan style was like the English newspapers but people were used to with Urdu newspaper which are different in style. . [35]
Daily Dunya (Urdu: روزنامہ دُنیا) is an Urdu daily newspaper from Pakistan. It was launched on 3 September 2012 by National Communication Services from Lahore, Pakistan. [1] It is published simultaneously from Karachi, Lahore, Faisalabad, Gujranwala, Multan, Quetta and Sargodha. One 'Urdu Newspapers Online' website calls this ...
This enabled Barrister Mainul Hosein to resume publishing, under the watchful eye of the authorities, on May 21, 1971, from the Daily Pakistan Press. [ 2 ] [ 7 ] For the remainder of the Bangladesh Liberation War , the paper was a mouthpiece for Yahya and Tikka Khan and severely criticised the freedom fighters.