Echorouk
From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
| Type | Daily newspaper |
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| Format | tabloid |
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| Owner | Ech-chorouk Information |
| Editor | Nasr Eddine KACEM |
| Founded | 1991 |
| Political allegiance | Centre-Left |
| Language | Arabic |
| Price | DA10 (Saturday-Thursday) €1.00 (Europe) |
| Headquarters | Maison de la presse Abdelkader Safir, Kouba , algiers |
| Circulation | 240,000 (May 2006 - May 2007) |
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| Website: Ech-chorouk El-youmi Unlimited | |
Echrouk in Arabicبالعربيةجريدة الشروق اليومي or Ech Chorouk El Youmi (Arabic, aš-šurūqu-l-yawmi, The Daily Dawn) It is a daily newspaper in Algeria published Saturday to Thursday in the tabloid format. It is the second-largest daily Arabophone newspaper (after El Khabar), started in 1991.
The paper is independent, and often critical of the government, as well as strongly critical of the Islamist rebel movements which remain active after the Algerian Civil War. The paper also publishes Ech Chorouk El Ousboui, a weekly supplement.
[edit] 2006 Qadhafi affair
In a fall 2006 trial, the leader of neighbouring Libya, Muammar al-Gaddafi, took the unprecedented step of suing the paper in an Algerian court for defamation. The court decided on October 31 that Ech Chorouk's reporting of Qadhafi's attempts to induce Algerian Touaregs to separatism had slandered the Libyan leader, and suspended the paper for two months. The editor and the responsible reporter were both sentenced to six months in jail. The verdict was condemned as a strike against press freedom by virtually the entire Algerian independent press and numerous political parties, as well as from international press watchdogs.[1]


