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Bengali 1940s Defunct 70 Khyber Mail: Urdu Peshawar 1932 Defunct in 1989 71 Daily Maidan – 72 Millat: Gujrati, Urdu Karachi 1948 73 Talár: Brahui – – 74 Agahi: Weekly Urdu Karachi 2006 75 Zamindar – Lahore 1873 Defunct in 1956 76 Nawai Watan: Balochi: Quetta – 77 Sandesh: Urdu, Sindhi Kotri: 78 Socialist Weekly: Weekly Urdu Karachi ...
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.
The Dainik Bangla is a Bengali-language daily newspaper in Bangladesh. The newspaper was closed in 1997 and was later revived on 4 September 2022 by an editorial panel led by Nazrul Islam Mazumder and Chowdhury Nafeez Sharafat. [2]
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.
On 24 January 1971, the offices of The Morning News and the other pro-Pakistan military junta newspaper, Dainik Pakistan, were burned down by protestors. [4] On 2 March 1971, Pakistani soldiers shot at protesters outside the newspaper office at DIT intersection around 9:30 pm. [ 5 ] After the Independence of Bangladesh in 1971 Shamsul Huda ...
Awam (Urdu: روزنامہ عوام) is an Urdu language daily newspaper based in Karachi, Pakistan. [1] This newspaper was started in 1994. [2] It is an evening daily newspaper published by Jang Group of Newspapers. The Sindhi version of Awam is the most circulated newspaper in interior Sindh.
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]
Daily Imroze is an Urdu language newspaper in Pakistan published daily from Karachi. This is one of the oldest newspapers of Pakistan that originally started publishing from Lahore in the newly independent Pakistan soon after 1947. It had distinguished people like Maqbool Jahangir, Ahmad Nadeem Qasmi, Intezar Hussain and Shafqat Tanvir Mirza among its journalists, columnists and editors from ...