Jump to content

Syria Times

From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

This is an old revision of this page, as edited by Auteuil-Passy (talk | contribs) at 14:08, 21 August 2022. The present address (URL) is a permanent link to this revision, which may differ significantly from the current revision.

Syria Times
TypeOnline newspaper
Founder(s)Tishreen Organization for Press and Publishing
Political alignmentBa'athism
LanguageEnglish
Ceased publication2008 (as print version)
HeadquartersDamascus
Sister newspapersTishreen
WebsiteSyria Times

The Syria Times (Arabic: سيريا تايمز) was an English-language Syrian daily newspaper.

Profile

The Syria Times was published by Tishreen Organization for Press and Publishing, a government-owned company that publishes the leading Arabic daily Tishreen.[1] As of 2000, these two newspapers had a circulation of 5,000 and 60,000, respectively.

Condemnation of Iraq war

In March and April 2003, The Syria Times received some international attention due to its harsh condemnation of the US-led war against Iraq, well in line with the official Syrian discourse in the debates of the UN Security Council. For instance, The Irish Times noticed that “The Syria Times attacked Bush's "unholy war" and his "imperialist strategy to control the Arab oil-rich region””.

In an interview with The Middle East magazine, Fuad Mardood, editor of The Syria Times, said: “I cannot imagine that there is anyone in Syria who wants to attack our policy[2] (…) You can find people who have personal motives who may attack the system, but it is only to achieve personal goals.”[citation needed]

In late May 2008, Mohammad Agha was released from his position as editor-in-chief of Syria Times. The decision was apparently made by the Minister for Information Mohsen Bilal. A history of differences between the two had been reported. The official reason for Agha's termination was failure to catch a mistake regarding the caption accompanying a photograph.

Closure

On 8 June 2008, The Syria Times was closed for an indefinite period of time. Various reasons were given, chief amongst them issues relating to the contract for the new editor-in-chief. A report on the viability of the Syria Times was delivered to the People's Assembly (the Syrian parliament) in July, and assistance was requested to restart the newspaper.

Following lengthy delays, a 2-year agreement (since extended) was signed with the United Nations Development Programme (UNDP) to assist the newspaper to the tune of $900,000 used for analysis, restructuring, training and equipment.[3] No official date has been set for recommencing publishing of the Syria Times.

Relaunch as E-newspaper

On 6 October 2012, the then minister of information Omran al-Zoubi inaugurated the first Syrian e-newspaper "Syria Times". The launching coincided with the country's celebrations of the 39th anniversary of the Liberation War of October, led by the late President Hafez al-Assad.

On the importance of the re-launching the "Syria Times" e-newspaper, Minister al-Zou'bi said: "We are in need for new tools to communicate with English-speaking communities, as to address the people of these communities and present our views and causes the way they understand, and not the way we want to."

Director General of al-Wehda Press Foundation, Khalaf al-Meftah, expressed hope that the re-launching of the Syria Times would be a further step forward by the Syrian Media, in continuation of the ongoing tireless media efforts as to disseminate the reality of the events on the ground, and as to expose media outlets of fabrications and lies.

On his part, the Syria Times editor-in-chief, Mohammad Abdo Al-Ibrahim, underlined that the daily, at the directive of information minister, Omran al-Zou'bi, would adopt in its media coverage the main principles and ethics of journalism, including those of transparency, credibility, and objectivity. The main contents of the daily focus on issues and topics related to national reconciliation, dialogue, society, politics, Syrian Expatriates, environment, tourism, archaeology, sports, economy, culture, as well on other interactive varied topic and issues of debate. added Al-Ibrahim.

Notes

  1. ^ Alan George (6 September 2003). Syria: Neither Bread Nor Freedom. Zed Books. p. 125. ISBN 978-1-84277-213-3.
  2. ^ Barry Rubin (2007). The Truth about Syria. Palgrave Macmillan. pp. 62. ISBN 9780230605206.
  3. ^ "Support to the Syria Times Newspaper" Archived 27 April 2009 at the Wayback Machine UNDP Syria

Further reading

  • Alan George. (2000). ”In Syria, the media is the system”, Middle East; p. 38.
  • Joe Humphreys. (24 March 2003). ”War on Iraq - War Briefing”, The Irish Times, p. 8.