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Newspapers published in Bangladesh are written in Bengali or English language versions. Most Bangladeshi daily newspapers are usually printed in broadsheets; few daily tabloids exist. Daily newspapers in Bangladesh are published in the capital, Dhaka, as well as in major regional cities such as Chittagong, Khulna, Rajshahi, Rangpur, Sylhet, and ...
Daily Banglar Bani; Daily Bir Chattagram Mancha; Daily Brahmanbaria; Daily Inqilab; The Daily Ittefaq; Daily Jalalabad; Daily Naya Diganta; The Daily Observer (Bangladesh) The Daily Sangram; The Daily Star (Bangladesh) Daily Sun (Bangladesh) Dainik Bangla; Desh Rupantor; Dhaka Tribune
The Daily Ittefaq (Bengali: দৈনিক ইত্তেফাক, romanized: Dôinik Ittefāk, Bangla pronunciation: [ˈd̪ɔinik ˈit̪ːefak]), is a Bangla daily newspaper. Founded in 1949 by Maulana Bhashani and Yar Mohammad Khan , it is the oldest newspaper, and one of the most circulated newspapers in Bangladesh.
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.
Editors' Council was established in 2013. The founding members were AMM Bahauddin (Daily Inqilab), Alamgir Mohiuddin (Daily Naya Diganta), Anwar Hossain Manju (The Daily Ittefaq), A. H. M. Moazzem Hossain (The Financial Express), Imdadul Haq Milon (Kaler Kantho), Khondoker Muniruzzaman (The Sangbad), Mahbubul Alam (The Independent), Mostafa Kamal Majumder (The New Nation), MA Malek ...
Headquarter of The Daily Ittefaq and Manab Zamin. The Daily Manab Zamin (Bengali: মানবজমিন lit. People's Land) is a major daily tabloid newspaper in Bangladesh, published from Dhaka in the Bengali language. It is the first and largest circulated Bengali tabloid daily in the world, with 19,000,000 monthly pageviews on its online ...
The Daily Star described 1954 to 1971 as the "golden era" of The Daily Ittefaq under Hossain and uncompilable to any newspaper in Bangladesh. [6] During the Bangladesh Liberation War, the office of Ittfaq was burned down by Pakistan Army on 25 March 1971 at the start of Operation Searchlight. [7]
In 1975, the government of Bangladesh closed all newspapers except The Daily Ittefaq, The Bangladesh Times, The Bangladesh Observer and the Dainik Bangla, which were nationalised. [9] After the assassination of Sheikh Mujibur Rahman in the 15 August 1975 Bangladesh coup d'état , the newspaper, then state-owned, stopped reporting about him and ...