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Jang

                    Jang News



Roznama Jang (Urdu: روزناما جانگ) is an Urdu newspaper based in Karachi, Pakistan. It is Pakistan's most established paper in continuous circulation since its inception in 1939, first distributed during World War II, resulting in the name (Jung) meaning "war" in Urdu. [2] Its CEO and Manager-in-Bass is Mir Shakeel-ur-Rehman. Past editors and contributors include Mahmood Sham, Nazir Naji.
The current [when?] list of reporters includes Salim Safi, Hasan Nisar, Ghazi Salahuddin, Wajahat Masood, Hafeezullah Niazi, Irshad Bhatti, Mazhar Barlas, Attaul Haq Qasmi, Ansar Abbasi, Anwar Ghazi, Ali Moin Nawaz and Yasir Pirzada.

  War papers are divided by war gathering. Initially it was divided as a week after week to increase political consciousness among the Muslims living in English India. The superiority of this gathering is that Daily Jang is the most free Urdu daily newspaper of Pakistan.

  It is distributed from Karachi, Lahore, Rawalpindi, Quetta, Multan and London.

Best News Paper Of Pakistan 

A better legal executive than them for news inclusion. Daily Jang and its associated media, including Geo News, have similarly criticized the perceived obstruction of politics by the military and the legal executive. Prime Minister Pastor Imran Khan and his party Pakistan Tehreek-e-Insaaf also faced blistering analysis from media sources often claimed by Mir Shakeel-ur-Rehman and his supporters.

  His tough approach to the military came to the fore in public when he blamed the head of an army-run intellectual organization for the plot to shoot and injure Hamid Mir in Karachi in April 2016. On several occasions and the sign of the TV stations related to its sister concern, Jio Telecom Company, was mixed, disturbed and rearranged on various occasions.
Proprietary design
  Daily Jang has an independent paper partnership (private) limited. The organization's 1975 shareholding design records Mir Javed Rehman, Mir Shakeel-ur-Rehman and S Jarar Hussain as its investors, each holding 33.33 percent of the offering. The latest ownership structure includes the debenture holders and the ownership structure depends on them.

  Jang Distributions (Private) is the largest debenture holder in the restricted entity. He holds 88% of the debentures, with Mir Shakeel-ur-Rehman (6.90%), his brother Mir Javed Rehman (5%) and Mansoor Rehman (0.10%), a business leader of the Jang-e-Iqsaat.

  A majority stake, 62.8%, is held by Joined Speculations Limited in Jang Distributions (Private) Limited. Other offers in Jang Distributions (Pvt) Restricted are claimed by Jang (Pvt) Restricted (29.27%), Mir Javed Rehman (1.36%) and Mir Shakeel Rehman (6.08%).

  Consolidated Ventures Restricted, on its part, is held by Mir Javed Rehman (24.34% offer) and Mir Shakeel Rehman (75.35% offer). Jung (Pvt.) Limited, as well, is claimed by two siblings who own all but one of its 223,452 offerings.
  Mir Shakeel Rehman and Mir Javed Rehman control less than 99.90% of the shares of Automukhtar Paper Company Private Limited.
Year of stay
  1939

  Bearer of subsidiary interests
  Mir Khalilur Rehman
  Born in Gujranwala, a city 50 km north of Lahore, in 1927, its people moved to Delhi at the start of World War II. He started Jang as a weekly paper in Delhi while he was studying there. He would report entire items in the paper without anyone else, alone before creating and selling it. When Pakistan was cut off from India in 1947, he was known as a distributor/supervisor among the Muslims of Delhi who maintained the creation of the new state as a nation for Muslims living in English India. .
  Not long after the creation of Pakistan, Mir Khalil-ur-Rehman began distributing daily newspapers from Karachi as war and found a ready crowd among the city's makeshift networks that were eager to secure the new state comfortably between Delhi and its capital. They had left their homes nearby.
  In 1962, Mir Khalil-ur-Rehman founded Day-to-Day News, an English-language evening newspaper distributed from Karachi. In 1967, he established Akhbar Jahan, which has grown into the largest weekly Urdu language program in Pakistan. Similarly, he was the editor of MAG, the latest English-language magazine distributed from Karachi since the mid-1980s.
  Today, his children, Mir Shakeel Rehman and Mir Javed Rehman, are running these distribution operations as well as a couple of TV stations and some news sites under the Jang Ijaz standard.
Associated Interest Chief
  Mir Shakeelur Rehman
  The younger of the two children of Jang Gathering founder Mir Khalil-ur-Rehman, he is widely known as MSR.  He has grown his father's paper distributing business into a multi-billion rupee media domain in recent years - becoming Pakistan's biggest and most notable media mogul.
  Mir Shakeel-ur-Rehman, who lives mostly in Dubai, is one of the stalwarts of online news in Pakistan.  Daily War turned into the country's most memorable paper with its web version in 1996.  Since then, this version has evolved into a fully modern news site in the Urdu language and has become one of the most used web-based news sources in the country.  At this point, virtually all the news sites Mir Shakeel-ur-Rehman and his family have have their own sites, each with a large following.
  He has dabbled in the broadcast business and set up a few TV stations.  These include Pakistan's most-watched Urdu-language news channel, Geo News, and the country's youth-only channel, Aag (which shut down after two or three years in 2002 on the grounds that it could not protect itself  could not get) are included.
  Mir Shakeel-ur-Rahman's initial introduction to the news business was running the English-language evening paper Daily News, shortly after completing his exams in the latter part of the 1970s.  He turned it into the largest circulating evening newspaper in Karachi shortly after taking control of the administration.
He is firmly at the helm of the All Pakistan Papers Society (APNS), a delegation of print media owners. He has also been instrumental in the development of the Pakistan Telecasters Association (PBA) which addresses the organizations and individuals operating TV slots and radio broadcasts in Pakistan.
  Not at all like his father who avoided meddling in most legislative matters outright, Mir Shakeel-ur-Rehman never shied away from confronting political leaders, collectives and even states. In the latter part of the 1990s, he came into sharp conflict with the then-regular civilian legislature of supreme leader Nawaz Sharif, who rejected the daily war and restrictions on the division of his subsidiaries for basic involvement in his administration. forced to do Mir Shakeel Rehman and Maleeha Lodhi, who were then working as managers of The News Worldwide, and several other members of the staff of Jang Ijatsa faced treason charges for distributing news and viewpoints that Sharif Could have been without. .
  In 2007, Mir Shakeel-ur-Rehman had another clash with public authority, this time over President General Pervez Musharraf's curtailment of the military-run organization. Thus, Geo News, a news station claimed by the Mir family, was momentarily shut down and one of its senior moderators, Hamid Mir (not related to the Mir family), was banned from appearing on TV. went
  Since Musharraf's ouster in 2008, Mir Shakeel-ur-Rehman and his coterie have openly maintained Nawaz Sharif's party, the Pakistan Muslim Association Nawaz (PMLN), to the extent that they are better suited for news coverage. The wrath of the legal executive has been earned. Daily Jang and its related news sources have also been unusually critical of strategic obstruction in government affairs. This analysis became alarmingly clear when GEO News accused the head of an army-run intelligence organization of conspiring to shoot and harm the channel's star moderator Hamid Mir in Karachi in April 2014. It was stopped on various occasions and the sign of its TV slots was disturbed and rearranged on various occasions.



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