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Utusan Malaysia ( Jawi: اوتوسن مليسيا; English: The Malaysian Tribune or simply Utusan) is a Malaysian Malay-language daily newspaper. Formerly owned by the Utusan Group, the newspaper is currently owned by Media Mulia. Distinctive for its blue masthead as its logo and trademark, Utusan Malaysia is the oldest Malay-language ...
Harian Metro – Malaysia's largest and number one nationwide Malaysia-language tabloid newspaper. Kosmo! – Malaysia's nationwide Malaysia-language tabloid newspaper. Majoriti 7. Sinar Harian – Malaysia's nationwide Malaysia-language tabloid community newspaper. Utusan Borneo – Malay daily in Sarawak and Sabah, published by The Borneo Post.
Malaysia's oldest Malay-language newspaper, Utusan Malaysia, on Wednesday abruptly ceased publication and placed more than 800 employees on leave, citing declining readership and advertising revenue.
Utusan Borneo is a Malay-Iban (for the Sabah edition, it is bilingual in Malay and Kadazan-Dusun language) newspaper published by Harian Borneo Post Sdn Bhd. Based on audited circulation figures by Audit Bureau of Circulations Malaysia for January–June 2015,daily circulation for the Utusan Borneo (Sarawak) of 36,251 copies in Sarawak.
Kosmo! Kosmo! (short for Cosmopolitan; Malay: Kosmopolitan) is a Malay-language compact format newspaper tabloid in Malaysia owned by the Utusan Group, which also owns Kosmo! 's Sunday paper Kosmo! Ahad, Utusan Malaysia, and Mingguan Malaysia. [1] It is available in Malaysia at most newsstands.
The New Sabah Times is a newspaper in Sabah, Malaysia. The Sabah Times commenced publication on 21 January 1953, published by Donald Stephens (later Tun Fuad Stephens) and had a daily circulation of approximately 1000. It was the only English-language daily newspaper. The North Borneo News, first published in 1948 in Sandakan was a fortnightly ...
The Malay newspaper Utusan Malaysia had reported she had "advised" a mosque in Puchong not to use loudspeakers while making the azan. She denied the allegation. [3] It was found out later that a faulty loudspeaker system was the reason why the mosque did not broadcast the azan. [4]
Since 1970, both have had their countries issue bans on the physical distribution on newspaper media of the other country (by refusing to issue newspaper or publishing permits); for example, Malaysian newspapers such as the New Straits Times and Utusan Malaysia are banned from mass printed circulation in Singapore, whilst corresponding ...