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Ad-Dustour (Jordan)

Jordanian Arabic daily newspaper


Jordanian Arabic daily newspaper

FieldValue
nameAd-Dustour
(الدستور),
native_nameالدستور
imageالدستور الاردنية.jpg
image_size300px
typeDaily newspaper
formatPrint, online
founded
ownersJordan Press and Publishing Company
headquartersAmman, Jordan
editorMustafa Riyalat
website[Ad-Dustour website](https://www.addustour.com)
languageArabic

(الدستور),

Ad-Dustour (, '''The Constitution''') is an Arabic-language daily newspaper published in Jordan. Its headquarters is in Amman, Jordan.

History and profile

The first issue of Ad-Dustour (in Arabic الدستور) was published on 28 March 1967 as a result of a merger of two publications: Filastin (in Arabic فلسطين) and Al Manar (in Arabic المنار) published in the West Bank that had ceased publication in 1967 because of the Six-Day War.

The daily was a private company until 1986 when the Jordanian government bought a share of it. The daily has nearly 600 staff.

From 1991 to 1995 Musa Keilani served as the editor-in-chief of the paper. Its editor was Nabil Sharif until February 2009. The current editor-in-chief is Mustafa Riyalat.

In 1998, the daily started its website, the first newspaper in the Arab world to do so.

The estimated circulation of Ad-Dustour was 40,000 whereas it was 90,000 copies in 2003.

An Arabic website, Industry Arabic, named Ad Dustour as the most influential Arabic newspaper in 2020.

Contents

The daily contains four or five sections:

  • First Section: for headline and domestic news.
  • Second Section: for international news, business and economy.
  • Addustour Alriyadi: for international and domestic sport news.
  • Doroob: for miscellaneous news related to health and living styles.
  • The Cultural Section: This section appears every Friday and contains domestic, regional, and international cultural events.
  • Al-Shabab: This section is published every Wednesday, and daily during major sport competitions such as FIFA World Cup. It covers weekly domestic, and international youth events.

References

References

  1. (23 August 2011). "Jordan profile. Media". BBC News.
  2. (2012). "Arab Media Review (January-June 2012)". Anti-Defamation League.
  3. William A. Rugh. (2004). "Arab Mass Media: Newspapers, Radio, and Television in Arab Politics". Greenwood Publishing Group.
  4. ""الدستور" أقدم صحيفة أردنية تواجه خطر التوقف عن الصدور". Asharq Al-Awsat.
  5. "[The newspaper] Filastin (Originally: Falastin)". National Library of Israel.
  6. "جريدة الدستور".
  7. Publitec Publications. (2007). "Who's Who in the Arab World 2007-2008". Walter de Gruyter.
  8. (24 February 2009). "New Jordanian ministers sworn in". BBC Monitoring International Reports.
  9. (2002). "Search for Peace in the Middle East, The: A Palestinian-Israeli Dialogue". United Nations Publications.
  10. "جريدة الدستور الاردنية". Ad Dustour.
  11. "Ranked: The Most Influential Arabic Newspapers (2020 Edition)". Industry Arabic.
  12. "جريدة الدستور". addustour.com.
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