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Yemen TV channel: The 1st official channel started broadcasting in 1975 in North Yemen as local media, joined other Arab channels via Intelsat-59 in 1995 and later Nilesat. Yamania television channel: This channel was founded in 1980 in the South of Yemen as "Aden channel" and was renamed after the unity of Yemen .
Al Ayyam was founded in 1958. [1] The founder was Mohammad Bashraheel. The paper was shut down after South Yemen became independent under a Marxist regime in 1967. Bashraheel's son Hisham resumed publication in 1990 after the unification of North and South Yemen.
Al-Hasabah was formerly a separate village as described by medieval writers al-Hamdani and al-Razi, but by the 1980s it had become a suburb of Sanaa. [ 31 ] The southwestern area on both sides of Haddah Road is a generally affluent area with relatively more reliable access to utilities like water and sanitation.
Yemen television channel: The first official channel started broadcasting in 1975 in North Yemen as local media, joined other Arab channels via Intelsat-59 in 1995 and later Nilesat. Yamania television channel: This channel was founded in 1980 in the South of Yemen as "Aden channel" and was renamed after the unity of Yemen .
Al-Ayyam (Yemen) Al-'Amal (Aden) O. Official Gazette (South Yemen) This page was last edited on 27 April 2020, at 12:15 (UTC). Text is available under the Creative ...
Organ of the Tawheed and Justice Movement in Yemen: Al-Balagh: Sana'a: 1990s [4] [2] Al-Bilad: Sana'a [3] Al-Haq: Aden: 1997 [2] Al-Ihya: Aden: 1997 [2] Al-Jamahir: Ba'th Party [2] Al-Jumhuryah: Daily: Taiz [3] 1960s [2] Al-Methaq: Weekly: Sana'a [2] Organ of the General People's Congress [3] Al-Mo'tamar: Al-Ra'y: Sana'a: 1951 [2] Al-Ra'y al ...
The formation of the council was authorized a week earlier by the Historic Aden Declaration, announced at a rally protesting the dismissal of al-Zoubaidi from his post as governor. [3] The STC, a major party to the Yemeni Civil War, claims to rule most of the territory in southern Yemen. [4] [5] [6] [7]
One of the principal mosques in Aden, it is named after Abu Bakr al-Aydarus, the wali (saint) of Aden. Originally built in the late-15th or early-16th century, the mosque underwent rebuilding after being destroyed in 1859. During the 1994 civil war in Yemen, Islamic fundamentalists from North Yemen damaged much of the mosque, burning copies of ...