Search results
Results from the WOW.Com Content Network
The Nation is a newspaper based in Blantyre, Malawi, owned by Nations Publications Limited. It began distribution on 26 July 1993, and became a daily newspaper on 11 July 1994, coming out on Mondays through Fridays. Its sister newspaper, Saturday Nation, now called Weekend Nation, was launched in 1995. [1]
Weekly newspaper The Nation Online: News Website, print English Website: Free : 1993 Weekly newspaper, Daily newspaper The Times Group Malawi News Website, print English Website: Free : Malawi News Agency: News Website English Website: Free : The Maravi Express News Website English Website: Free : 2015 The Maravi Post News Website English ...
Fuko Nation: Chichewa, Chitumbuka [8] Bi-weekly Malawi Government Gazette: 1894 [3] Malawi Morning: Kasungu [3] English and Chewa 2018 Online only. Published by Kawelama Creations [citation needed] Malawi News: English and Chewa [4] 1895 [3] Weekly. [4] Owned by BNL [citation needed] Malawi Voice [9] Limbe [7] Online only malawi24: Online only ...
List of newspapers in Malawi; B. The Big Issue Malawi; D. The Daily Times (Malawi) M. Malawi Government Gazette; N. The Nation (Malawi) Nyasa Times; W. Weekend Times
Malawi24 is a United Nations Global Compact member. It is affiliated with Media Institute of Southern Africa (MISA) - Malawi Chapter, a media watch-dog organisation across Southern Africa. It is currently one of the Malawi news sources aggregated by allafrica.com [2] and Google news [3]
Cecilia Tamanda Kadzamira, GCVO (born 25 June 1938) was the official hostess of Malawi during the reign of president Hastings Banda. Whilst she and Banda were not officially married, she served as the first lady or official hostess for several years. For several years, she was the most powerful woman in Malawi.
The second film submitted for Oscar international feature contention by Southeast African nation Malawi, following Shemu Joyah’s “The Road to Sunrise” in 2018, “Falsani: A Tale of Survival ...
Tito Banda (1950–2014), novelist, academic [1]; Ezra Jofiya Chadza (1923–1985), poet and novelist; William Chafulumira (1908–1981), writer on social issues [2] [3]; Yesaya Chibambo, author of A Short History of the Ngoni (1933), translated into English by Rev. Charles Stuart.