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The Bangladesh Observer, founded by Hamidul Huq Choudhury in 1949, [1] [2] was the oldest continuously published English-language daily newspaper in Bangladesh until it ceased publication in June 2010.
Monthly Bandhan-construction, Real estate, Interior & Architecture related Popular Monthly Magazine. Forum, a human rights oriented magazine published between 1969 and 1971, re-established in 2006. Dhaka Courier, English-language news magazine founded in 1984, it is the longest running English current affairs magazine in the country.
Pakistan Observer. Pakistan Observer is one of the oldest and widely read English-language daily newspapers of Pakistan. [peacock prose] It is published from six cities – Islamabad, Karachi, Lahore, Peshawar, Quetta and Muzaffarabad. [2] The newspaper was founded in 1988 by the veteran journalist late Zahid Malik.
The Daily Star is a Bangladeshi English-language daily newspaper. It is by far the largest circulating English-language newspaper in the country. [2] Founded by Syed Mohammed Ali on 14 January 1991, as Bangladesh transitioned and restored parliamentary democracy, [3] [4] the newspaper became popular for its outspoken coverage of politics, corruption, and foreign policy.
“Pakistan cricket sunk in Bay of Bengal,” read a headline in leading Urdu language newspaper Daily Jang on Wednesday. Bangladesh jumped three places to No. 4 in the ICC World Test Championship ...
Hamidul Huq Chowdhury ( Bengali: হামিদুল হক চৌধুরী) ( Urdu: حمید الحق چودھری) (1901–1992) was a Pakistani - Bangladeshi politician. He was the founder of The Pakistan Observer, an English-language newspaper which changed its name to The Bangladesh Observer after the Bangladesh Liberation War.
The Daily Observer [3] hit the stands in Bangladesh on 1 February 2011. [4] [5] Iqbal Sobhan Chowdhury, [6] the last editor of Bangladesh Observer, [7] started the circulation of a new newspaper by the name of The Daily Observer in 2011. The editor was sued by MP Nizam Uddin Hazari in 2017 for publishing an allegedly defamatory article ...
Salam was the editor of The Pakistan Observer from 1949 to 1972. There was a break in the distribution of the newspaper from 1952 to 1954, when it was banned by the government. Salam wrote an editorial in 1952 comparing the nepotism of one of the early caliphs with that of Prime Minister Khawaja Nazimuddin. The article was interpreted as ...