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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. [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.
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 The Entrepreneur Newspaper: private, bi-monthly The Evening News: state-owned The Finder Newspaper: news from Ghana and Africa, politics, entertainment, world, health ...
The Daily Guide, a daily newspaper published in Pulaski County, ... Daily Guide, a daily newspaper published in Accra, Ghana This page was last edited on 28 ...
This is a request for input about the general reliability of news sources in the Ghanaian media landscape. This discussion is intended to be part of a series of discussions assessing the reliability of news sources in a range of regions and topics currently not widely discussed at RSN, and particularly those affected by systemic bias, with the primary intent of distributing editor knowledge ...
The main news agency, Ghana News Agency, was set up in 1957 by Nkrumah to provide balanced information on local and international news. Reuters helped provide the agency with guidance and technical assistance until 1961. The agency had subscriptions from over 140 organisations and six news agencies in 2000. [1]
Ghana's government will investigate controversial plans to build a $400m (£330m) national cathedral, new President John Mahama has said. Pressure has been mounting on authorities to drop the ...
The Ghanaian Times is a state-owned daily newspaper published in Accra, Ghana. The newspaper was established in 1957. [ 2 ] It has a circulation of 80,000 copies and is published six times per week.
She relocated to London to continue her work as a journalist as the publisher and editor of a weekly news magazine called Talking Drums. She later become the Deputy Editor of Daily Programmes in the African Service division of BBC World Service. [7] [8] Ohene lived in London for 19 years, after leaving Ghana in need of sanctuary. She remembers ...