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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 Recorder: English Karachi, Islamabad and Lahore 1965 Pakistan's first financial newspaper 17 Daily Times: Lahore, Karachi, Islamabad 2002 18 Dawn [5] Karachi ...
Geo News (Urdu: جیو نیوز) is a Pakistani news channel owned by the Jang Media Group. [1] It was launched in October 2002 as the news and current affairs program was under its flagship channel Geo TV, which later in 2004, Geo TV decided to launch its own news channel.
Daily Jang - original flagship newspaper of the Group in the Urdu language. Group Editor: Mehmood Sham in Karachi. Newspaper editions are issued in Karachi, Lahore, Rawalpindi, Peshawar, Multan and London, with the largest daily circulation in Pakistan among Urdu newspapers [5] The News International - daily newspaper in English started in 1991
Dawn News (shifted to Urdu Programming) Express 24/7 (changed its name to Tribune 24/7, replaced by Express Entertainment) Geo English (replaced by Geo Tez) Indus News (shut down on 14 September 2021) Tribune 24/7 (previously known as Express 24/7, replaced by Express Entertainment)
Lahore [9] Dawn News: 25 May 2007 Karachi [10] Dunya News: 1 December 2008 Lahore [11] Express News: 1 January 2008 Karachi [12] Geo News: May 2002 [13] GNN: 14 August 2018 [14] Hum News: 11 May 2018 Islamabad [15] Indus News: English: November 2018 Lahore [16] KTN News: Sindhi, Urdu: October 2007 Karachi: Khyber News: Pashto, Urdu: August 2007 ...
Mir joined the Daily Jang (Lahore) in 1987 and worked there as sub-editor, reporter, feature writer and edition in charge.In 1990, Mir was abducted, beaten and driven to a house where his captors demanded to know his source for the critical story he wrote when then President Ghulam Ishaq Khan was planning to dismiss the Bhutto government. [19]
Pakistan has around 300 privately owned daily newspapers. According to the Pakistan Bureau of Statistics (formerly the Federal Bureau of Statistics), they had a combined daily sale of 6.1 million copies in 2009. Television is the main source of news and information for people in Pakistan's towns, cities and large areas of the countryside.
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]