Dawn (newspaper)

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Type Daily newspaper
Format Broadsheet

Owner Dawn Group of Newspapers
Editor Abbas Nasir
Founded 1941
Headquarters Haroon House,
Dr. Ziauddin Ahmed Road,
Saddar, Karachi

Website: www.DAWN.com

Dawn is Pakistan's oldest and most widely-read English-language newspaper. One of Pakistan's two largest English language dailies, it is the flagship of the Dawn Group of Newspapers, published by Pakistan Herald Publications, which also owns the Herald, a magazine, and the evening paper The Star. Pakistan's newspaper of record, it is considered to be something of a Pakistani institution.

It was founded in 1941 by Mohammad Ali Jinnah. The newspaper has offices in Karachi, Lahore, and Islamabad, as well as representatives abroad. As of 2004, it has a weekday circulation of over 138,000. The current editor of Dawn is Abbas Nasir.

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[edit] Early history

Founded by Jinnah on October 26, 1941, as a mouthpiece for the Muslim League, Dawn was originally a weekly publication, published in the Indian capital, Delhi. Jinnah summed up the paper's purpose when he stated:

"The Dawn will mirror faithfully the views of Muslim India and the All India Muslim League in all its activities: economic, educational and social and more particularly political, throughout the country fearlessly and independently and while its policy will be, no doubt, mainly to advocate and champion the cause of the Muslims and the policy and programme of the All India Muslim League, it will not neglect the cause and welfare of the peoples of this sub-continent generally".

Dawn became a daily newspaper on October 1942. It won India-wide fame under its first editor, Pothan Joseph. After the creation of Pakistan, the newspaper moved to Karachi, the capital of the newly formed nation state.

[edit] Freedom of expression

Zaib-un-Nissa Hamidullah, Pakistan's first woman columnist, used to write for Dawn until she left due to sexist policies. However, Dawn is now a very progressive and modern newspaper. Under General Pervez Musharraf, Pakistan has enjoyed a lively media and relative freedom of the English press. However, the newspaper often runs a neutral editorial policy and is sometimes careful of overly criticizing the army or religious parties.

In addition, Dawn regularly carries syndicated articles from western newspapers like The Independent, The Guardian, the Los Angeles Times and The Washington Post.

In Pakistan Dawn has many more editions like Sci-tech, Addbuzz, Young World etc.

[edit] Famous employees

[edit] Controversy

The Dawn website (http://www.dawn.com), in 1999, was blocked from access within India by Videsh Sanchar Nigam Limited, a government-owned telecommunications company which at the time had monopoly control of the international Internet gateways in India. Media site Rediff elicited that the ban was instigated by the Indian government, and then published detailed instructions as to how one could bypass the filter and view the site.

[edit] See also

[edit] External links