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Daily Guide is a private-owned daily newspaper owned by the Blay Family [1] published in Accra, Ghana. The paper was started in 1984. The paper was started in 1984. [ 2 ] [ 3 ] This daily newspaper is published six times per week and is regarded as the most circulated independent paper in Ghana with a readership of about 50,000 copies a day.
Business Guide: private weekly owned by the Daily Guide: Christian Messenger: private monthly owned by the Presbyterian Church of Ghana: Daily Democrat: private Daily Ghana: private Daily Graphic: state-owned; along with the Mirror, the most widely read newspaper in Ghana Daily Guide: private Daily Statesman: private The Dispatch: private
Daily Guide may refer to: The Daily Guide , a daily newspaper published in Pulaski County, Missouri, United States Daily Guide (Ghana) , a daily newspaper published in Accra, Ghana
With a circulation of 100,000 copies, the Graphic is the most widely read daily newspaper in the country. [ 2 ] [ 3 ] The paper has seen many editors replaced over the course of its history, particularly post-independence, after a string of successive military coups that resulted in the sacking editors who opposed the government policies. [ 4 ]
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The Statesman Newspaper is a Ghanaian newspaper printed weekly in Ghana by the Graphic Communications Group. It is the oldest mainstream newspaper in Ghana. [ 1 ] It has been in circulation since 1949.
Founded in 1950, it is a state-owned paper, and as of 2012 the most widely read newspaper in Ghana. Per the 2012 study, the Graphic is roughly neutral with a very slight pro-government and even slighter pro-NDC tendency in its reporting (p. 78, p. 112). [3] The paper also runs a significant amount of ads placed by the government (p. 80). [3]
The media in the Gold Coast first emerged in the 19th century with the publication of The Gold Coast Gazette and Commercial Intelligencer in 1822. [1] The paper had several functions: to provide information for civil servants and European merchants, and to help promote literacy rates and rural development among the local population - while encouraging unity with the Gold Coast government. [1]