Search results
Results from the WOW.Com Content Network
The Times of Zambia is now owned by the Zambian Government. The newspaper recently went online in English and the site is currently under development. It publishes the Sunday Times of Zambia every Sunday. [2] The newspaper has its headquarters at Kabelenga Avenue in Zambia's second largest city Ndola.
This is an incomplete list of newspapers published in Zambia This is a dynamic list and may never be able to satisfy particular standards for completeness. You can help by adding missing items with reliable sources .
In 2002, there were only 4 newspapers in Zambia, two of which were nationally owned. As of 2020, there are 36 newspapers and news websites. [3] [29] One of the biggest Zambian newspapers with a growing digital platform is the Lusaka Times. The Lusaka Times launched its website in 2007 and has gone through many updates and changes since then.
The newspapers operate also online services. There are about 9 Television stations and 28 Radio stations in Zambia. Zambia, in the recent times, had witnessed the establishment of many private television and radio stations with different audiences. Some are independent newspapers and private radio stations.
The Ministry of Information and Media is a ministry in Zambia. It is headed by the Minister of Information and Media. The ministry controls two publicly owned newspapers, the Times of Zambia and the Zambia Daily Mail, and has a seat on the board of the Zambia National Broadcasting Corporation. [1]
With Hall's help, M'membe went on to found Post Newspapers Limited in 1991, as well as a printing company, Independent Printers Limited, which would be responsible for printing The Zambia Post, Post Newspapers' flagship publication. [1] The pair modelled the paper's design on South Africa's liberal Weekly Mail and Lisbon, Portugal's daily ...
On December 20, 2011, the government-run Times of Zambia newspaper published an article alleging that the government had seized several of Thandiwe Banda's properties, including a hotel in Malawi, worth billions of kwacha. [6] Banda called the allegations false and demanded an apology and a retraction, which the newspaper initially refused. [6]
Chansa Kabwela is a Zambian journalist, and news editor of the Zambia Post newspaper, who came to wide attention after her arrest on obscenity charges. Kabwela had distributed graphic images of childbirth to government officials to illustrate the effects of a Zambian nurses' strike. Kabwela was acquitted of the obscenity charge.