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The Vanuatu Daily Post is a newspaper published in Port Vila in Vanuatu. It is the only daily newspaper in Vanuatu. It is the only daily newspaper in Vanuatu. The newspaper's founder, Marc Neil-Jones , had been the victim of physical attacks supported by government ministers during his time at the newspaper.
The Vanuatu Weekly is a state-owned paper published in all three national languages. The two main daily newspapers are both private: the Port Vila Presse (in French and in English), and the Vanuatu Daily Post (in English). The Daily Post has a sister weekly newspaper in French, L'Hebdo du Vanuatu.
In 2002 Neil-Jones launched the Vanuatu Daily Post, the country's first daily newspaper. In 2006, the paper's sports editor Samuel Taffo was assaulted by a police officer. Neil-Jones demanded that the officer be suspended. In response, police officers arrested Neil-Jones at the newspaper office, and confined him to the maximum security gaol.
Vanuatu Prime Minister Ishmael Kalsakau said political instability in the Pacific Islands nation could impact investment and tourism, after his government boycotted a no-confidence vote in ...
This is a list of newspapers in Vanuatu . L'Hebdo du Vanuatu. Nasara. Ni-Vanuatu. Pentecost Star. Port Vila Presse. Vanuatu Daily Post. The Vanuatu Independent [1] Vanuatu Times.
March 5, 2024 at 11:21 PM. By Kirsty Needham. SYDNEY (Reuters) -Six Chinese fishing boats were found to be violating Vanuatu's fisheries law after being inspected by local police who were on board ...
Vanuatu Daily Post, founded in 1993; United Kingdom. South Wales Daily Post, former name of the South Wales Evening Post, Swansea, Wales; Daily Post (London newspaper), founded in 1719; Liverpool Daily Post (1855–2013) Daily Post (North Wales), split off from the Liverpool Daily Post in 2003; Birmingham Daily Post, founded in 1857 (now the ...
The newspaper was launched by Gene Wong and Marc Neil-Jones of the anglophone Vanuatu Daily Post, with support from the European Union and the French embassy in Vanuatu. Its intended readership are francophone ni-Vanuatu, both in Vanuatu itself and in neighbouring, French-speaking New Caledonia. It also covers news from both countries.