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An-Nahar
Lebanese newspaper
Lebanese newspaper
| Field | Value |
|---|---|
| name | *An-Nahar* |
| النهار | |
| logo | Annahar.png |
| logo_size | 205px |
| image | An-Nahar-front-page-17-February--2914.jpg |
| caption | *An-Nahar* front page (17 February 2014) |
| type | Daily newspaper |
| format | Print, online |
| founder | Gebran Tueni |
| founded | |
| political_position | Centre-left |
| Pluralism | |
| Social liberalism | |
| language | Arabic |
| circulation | 45,000 (2012) |
| website |
النهار Pluralism Social liberalism
An-Nahar () is a leading Arabic-language daily newspaper published in Lebanon. In the 1980s, An-Nahar was described by The New York Times and Time Magazine as the newspaper of record for the entire Arab world.
History and profile
It was launched on 4 August 1933 as a four-page, hand-set paper. The paper, whose staff numbered five, including its founder Gebran Tueni, started with a capital of 50 gold pieces raised from friends, and a circulation of a mere 500 copies. Tueni served as the chief editor of the paper until his death in 1949. His son, Ghassan Tueni, and grandson, also named Gebran Tueni, were subsequent editors and publishers.
Ghassan Tueni was publisher and editor-in-chief of the paper from 1948 to 1999 when he retired. On 19 December 1976, Syrian forces occupied the offices of the daily, prompting Ghassan Tueni to suspend the publication for a while and leave Lebanon for Paris. In 1977, several journalists writing for the daily were detained.
Ghassan's son, Gebran Tueni, was the editor-in-chief of the paper from 2003 to 2005. He was elected to parliament for a Beirut constituency in the 2005 elections, but was assassinated on 12 December 2005 in Mkalles near Beirut in a car bomb explosion. A fiery critic of Syria and its hegemony in Lebanese affairs, Gebran had just returned on the eve of his assassination from Paris where he had been living for fear of assassination. After Gebran's assassination on 12 December 2005, his father Ghassan took over the paper again until his death on 8 June 2012.
Saudi Prince Al-Waleed bin Talal has a stake in the paper. The 2009 Ipsos Stat survey revealed that the paper is the most popular newspaper in Lebanon and one of the five most popular in the Middle East.
An-Nahar is the first Arab paper which regularly covers news on environmental issues. Since 1997, the daily contains a daily page for the environment.
Views and writers
An-Nahar provided a platform for various freethinkers to express their views during the years of the Syrian occupation of Lebanon. The paper can be best expressed as centre-left, though its writers' views range across the political spectrum.
Journalist Charles Glass argues that An-Nahar is Lebanon's equivalent of The New York Times.{{cite magazine
Now defunct Lebanese daily As-Safir was cited as the rival of An-Nahar. In the mid-1990s the latter was described as a moderate and right-of-center paper, while the former as a left-of-center paper. In the 2000s these papers were again supporters of two opposite poles in Lebanon, in that An-Nahar was a supporter of March 14 alliance, whereas As-Safir supported March 8 alliance.
On 11 October 2018 An-Nahar published eight blank pages to pay attention to the difficulties experienced in Lebanese press.{{cite news
Prominent writers for An-Nahar have included novelist and critic Elias Khoury, who used to edit its weekly cultural supplement Al Mulhaq (which appears on Saturdays) and, until his assassination, historian, journalist and political activist Samir Kassir. Walid Jumblatt worked as a reporter at the daily in the 1970s. Another well-known contributor was Samir Frangieh.{{cite book|title=Who's Who in Lebanon|year=2007
Circulation and audience
In the mid-1990s, the paper had the highest circulation in Lebanon. In 2012, the Lebanese Ministry of Information stated that An-Nahar has a circulation of 45,000 copies.
The paper's online version was the 13th most visited website for 2010 in the MENA region.
In addition to its native readers in Lebanon, the daily is read by officials, intellectuals and activists outside Lebanon.
Bans
The paper was closed for ten days on 3 May 1961 due to the publication of a cartoon depicting Lebanon as a province of Syria. Syria banned mass circulation of the daily in 2005, while its online edition was not banned. In March 2006, the Damascus correspondent of An-Nahar was charged in Syria with publishing "false information harmful to national security" after writing about the intelligence services of the country.
References
References
- (2 February 2006). "Daily "An Nahar" reeling from publisher's assassination, in-house feuding". Wikileaks.
- (8 June 2012). "Veteran Lebanese journalist Ghassan Tueni dies". BBC.
- "Syrian chronicles 1973-1990". Tayyar.
- (30 December 1976). "An Nahar suspends publication". Beaver County Times.
- Mordechai Nisan. "The Syrian occupation of Lebanon". ACPR.
- Paul Cochrane. "Saudi Arabia's Media Influence". Arab Media and Society.
- Najib Saab. "The Environment in Arab Media". Arab Forum for Environment and Development.
- "Lebanon". Publicitas.
- (6 August 1982). "U.S. and P.L.O. said to be Close to Accord on a Guerrilla Pullout". [[The New York Times]].
- William Edgett Smith. (16 August 1982). "Beirut Goes Up in Flames".
- Mohalhel Fakih. (2–8 September 2004). "Pulling at Lebanon's strings". Al Ahram Weekly.
- Yahya R. Kamalipour. (1994). "Mass Media in the Middle East: A Comprehensive Handbook". Greenwood Press.
- Elie Hajj. (26 April 2013). "Pierre Sadek Defended the Right to Criticize Until His Dying Breath". [[Al-Monitor.
- "Lebanon Press". Press Reference.
- (15 March 2012). "Mapping Digital Media: Lebanon". Open Society Foundations.
- (28 October 2010). "Forbes Releases Top 50 MENA Online Newspapers; Lebanon Fails to Make Top 10". Jad Aoun.
- Ghareeb, Edmund. (Summer 2000). "New Media and the Information Revolution in the Arab World: An Assessment". The Middle East Journal.
- Samir Khalaf. (2002). "Civil and Uncivil Violence in Lebanon: A History of the Internationalization of Communal Conflict". Columbia University Press.
- Sami Moubayed. (24–30 March 2005). "Reluctant embrace". Al Ahram Weekly.
- (30 April 2006). "Syria: Private media breaks taboos, but restrictions remain". Irin News.
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