Suche: *:*,

Resource type: Single newspaper (60)
Hong Kong iMail 
Description: A new English language tabloid newspaper from Hong Kong, established on May 29, 2000, by the Sing Tao Group. It succeeded the well known Hong Kong Standard, which after 51 years of operation closed down on May 27, 2000.
http://www.hk-imail.com/ more Language: eng English 中青在线 : CYOL
Description: Central organ of the China Communist Youth League 中國共青團 and one of the most widely read newspapers in China.
http://www.cyd.com.cn/ more Language: chi Chinese, eng English 星島日報 
Description: Launched in 1938, the Sing Tao Daily has become the flag-ship publication of the Sing Tao Newspaper Group, an international publishing concern serving Chinese readers in Hong Kong, Macao, Taiwan, America, Europe and Australia. The electronic edition is on the net since August 1995. The European edition is available at
http://www.singtaoeu.com/."As with other medium-sized mainstream newspapers, the Sing Tao Daily has been facing growing difficulties over the past two years, particularly as its market share has been eroded by the two mass-market dailies, the Oriental Daily News and Apple Daily. According to a February SRG Media Index Report, the Sing Tao Daily's average daily readership had almost halved from 218,000 at the end of 1996 to 120,000 in February 1998. The current economic crisis has also taken its toll."(Hong Kong Journalists Association and ARTICLE 19 [eds.]: "Questionable Beginnings. A report on Freedom of Expression in the Hong Kong SAR one year after the change of sovereignty." In: ARTICLE 19 (1998), URL:
http://www.hkja.org.hk/publications/rep98.html [accessed Oct. 29, 1998]).
http://www.singtao.com/ more Language: chi Chinese 新民传報 
Description: Originally founded as 新民報 in September 1929, the paper was closed down twice during its long history (once by the KMT during the 1940s, once during the Cultural Revolution). It is controlled by the 中共上海市委宣傳部 (Propaganda Office of the Shanghai Municipal Party Committee) and is the most popular newspaper in Shanghai. In recent years, it joined forces with Wenhuibao and now forms the core of the 文匯新民聯合報業集團 (Wenhui Xinmin Joined Newspaper Group).
http://www.xmwb.com.cn/ more Language: chi Chinese 大公報 
Description: Established in Tianjin in 1902, the Dagongbao is the oldest Chinese newspaper still in existence. After 蔣介石 Chiang Kaishek started to control the 國民黨 Kuomintang in 1927, the Dagongbao established close ties with the new leadership. In the following years the paper was also known under the name "l'impartial" and was widely read both by intellectuals and the bourgeoisie. During the war against Japan and the following struggle between the KMT and the CCP, the Dagongbao was published from various places, among others Shanghai, Chongqing, and Hankou. In Hong Kong it started publication in 1938, and after a few years of interruption during the Japanese occupation, reappeared there in 1948. Meanwhile, in 1949 a mainland version of the Dagongbao also reincarnated in Shanghai, later moved to Tianjin, and eventually closed in Beijing in 1966. The Hong Kong version is still running today and enjoys a broad readership even abroad.
http://www.takungpao.com.hk/ more Language: chi Chinese 羊城晚報 
Description: Established in 1957, this paper is a very popular local newspaper with national distribution. It is also widely read among intellectuals for its very open commentaries and investigative reports.
http://www.ycwb.com.cn/ more Language: chi Chinese 香港文匯報 
Description: Wen Wei Po was launched in 1948 by staff members of the Shanghai Wenhuibao and is together with Ta Kung Pao China's principal newspaper in the territory, supervised by Xinhua Hong Kong Branch. This not very popular newspaper is currently distributed in Hong Kong and Macao, with a small proportion going to mainland China and overseas. Wen Wei Po Daily appears at an average of ten big pages a day, covering China, Hong Kong and international news, financial news, as well as education, culture and sports. The paper is on the net since February 1997.
http://www.wenweipo.com/ more Language: chi Chinese China Daily 
Description: Published in China since June 1981 during the beginning of China's open door policy, China Daily was the first English daily newspaper in the People's Republic of China. In the beginning it followed the model of the People's Daily in its editorial policy. The paper is also printed in Hong Kong and North America. Under the supervision of the Information Departement, this paper directly reproduces the official news of the PRC.
http://www.chinadaily.com.cn/ more Language: eng English The Business Times 
Description: An online edition of a major Southeast Asian magazine aimed at qualified senior executives throughout the region. This monthly, est. 1965, provides authoritative, up-to-date coverage of Asian business affairs. The web site offers full-text articles from AsiaTech, Business Watch, Corporate View and Dateline Asia. Articles of earlier editions are also included.
http://business-times.asia1.com.sg/ more Language: eng English 解放日報 
Description: Since 1949; the on-line edition is a slightly shortened version of the printed edition, with greater emphasis on economics, foreign policy and East China issues.
http://www.jfdaily.com.cn/ more Language: chi Chinese 香港商報 
Description: One of the three major pro-Beijing newspapers in Hong Kong (the other two being the Ta Kung Pao 大公報 and the Wen Wei Po 文匯報); it is also the Hong Kong newspaper that is most widely distributed in mainland China. The Hong Kong Commercial Daily delivers news from Hong Kong, China, Taiwan, and the rest of the world, covering the whole range of economy, politics, society, and culture.
http://www.hkcd.com.hk/ more Language: chi Chinese 文匯報 
Description: Local newspaper with national circulation, containing city news and news of national relevance. Like the Guangming ribao, the Wenhuibao is a teacher's organ, published under the auspices of the Political Consultative Conference, an alliance of all democratic parties in the PRC."Wenhuibao was known as a leftist newspaper that had been popular with radical minded youth and intellectuals before 1949. After that it followed the Communist line completely but retained its policy of paying special attention to problems of interest to intellectuals."(Won Ho Chang: Mass Media in China: The History and The Future. Ames: Iowa State University Press 1989, p. 38).In 1948, staff members of the Shanghai Wenhuibao launched a paper with the same name in Hong Kong, where it is known as
Wen Wei Po or 香港文匯報.
http://www.whb.com.cn/ more Language: chi Chinese, eng English