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The sister Maltese-language paper Illum was first published in 2006. [3] In 2010, MaltaToday launched its internet news portal, and is the second most popular local news portal. [4] The current editorial lineup includes Kurt Sansone as Executive Editor, with Saviour Balzan as Managing Editor. The online editor is Karl Azzopardi.
The Malta Independent on Sunday: Daily: English: 1992: Standard Publications: Nationalist Party: Times of Malta, Sunday Times of Malta: Daily: English: 1935: Allied Newspapers: Nationalist Party: Established in 1929 as Times of Malta Weekly: Malta Today, Malta Today on Sunday: Biweekly: English: 1999: Media Today: Malta Labour Party and ...
The Assumption of Mary statue by Mariano Gerada, 1808, Għaxaq, Malta. August is known by the Maltese as 'ix-xahar tal-frott, ta' Santa Marija u ta' San Lawrenz' ('the month of fruit, Saint Mary and Saint Lawrence'). First Sunday of August: Saint Peter in Chains ('San Pietru fil-Ktajjen') in Birżebbuġa
News programming on TVM is the only major TV news not produced by a political party's media apparatus in Malta. The two other major Maltese networks (One and NET Television) are owned by the Labour and Nationalist parties respectively. TVM airs TVAM, a breakfast television program focused on news and current affairs, weekday mornings from 06:30 ...
Malta Today On Sunday. 2009. Recent activities: PM and his wife hosted 15 activities at Villa Francia in 2015 at average cost of €3,750 per occasion. The Malta Independent. 29 February 2016. Retrieved 12 July 2016.
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The Times of Malta and Il-Progress lasted until 1 March 1929. The English supplement then became The Times of Malta Weekly (forerunner of The Sunday Times of Malta). The Maltese side was named Ix-Xemx, later changed to Id-Dehen and later still to Il-Berqa, first published on 29 January 1932. Il-Berqa ceased publication on 30 November 1968.
This is a unique, medieval tradition which still survives today. Easter Sunday in Malta, by contrast, is marked by the incessant pealing of church bells, and festive, fast-paced processions, with the youth of each town running through the streets bearing sculptures of the Risen Christ.