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Syrian media organization From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
Enab Baladi (Arabic: عنب بلدي, lit. 'Country Grapes') is a Syrian nonprofit media organization that publishes a newspaper with the same name, in Arabic and English. It was established in Darayya, Syria in 2011, and is also a 501(c)(3) nonprofit organization.[2]
This article may require copy editing for external links in prose. (March 2024) |
Type | Weekly newspaper |
---|---|
Format | Tabloid |
Owner(s) | Enab Baladi - Nonprofit Media Organization |
Editor-in-chief | Jawad Sharbaji |
Managing editor | Ammar Ziadeh, Bilal Abo Laban |
Founded | 2011 |
Language | Arabic English |
Ceased publication | Announced on 23 November 2023 |
Headquarters | Istanbul, Turkey[1] |
Country | Turkey |
Circulation | 7,000 (Weekly) |
Website | www english |
Enab Baladi newspaper was launched in 2011 by a group of citizen journalists and activists from Daraya, a Syrian town in Damascus suburbs. On January 29, 2012, issue #0 was published marking the beginning of a revolutionary newspaper. Since then, it has been printed each week on Sundays, with one two-week stoppage in August 2012 due to the Darayya massacre committed by Assad forces.
Since its establishment during the first year of the Syrian uprising, late 2011, Enab Baladi (EB) has focused on promoting the peaceful resistance methods to counter the sectarian and violence narratives of the Syrian regime. EB coverage included the human rights violations perpetrated by the Syrian regime, as well as the inception of the nascent Syrian civil society, in addition to various news and topics in the fields of politics, economy, and social affairs.
The newspaper grew from amateur-run organization into becoming one of the most prominent Syrian media organizations according to BBC Syria profile page.[3] Currently, Enab Baladi produces several products, Enab Baladi Weekly Newspaper,[4] the Enab Online News Service Website,[5] The Syrian Print-Media Archive,[6] and its latest English news website.[7] These projects are supported by a network of reporters and journalists who strive to give credible reports from the ground in Syria.
Enab Baladi succeeded in drawing the attention of many local and international media. Its story appeared on Der Spiegel,[8] The Guardian,[9] and AFP News[10] among many others. The French magazine Elle published an article about EB's women team, "THE "GANG OF GIRLS" RISKS THEIR LIVES TO REPORT FROM INSIDE A WAR ZONE". Around ten women are working as reporters, editors, and translators for EB. The article tells the story of one of them, Kholoud Waleed, and highlights the role that women played in the establishment of the newspaper, the challenges they faced during their work as citizen journalists in Syria and the success they achieved.
Enab Baladi built relationships with many international organizations such as National Endowment for Democracy,[11] Internews, Free Press Unlimited, European Endowment for Democracy, l'Association de Soutien aux Médias Libres, Adopt a Revolution, L'agence française de coopération médias, Norwegian People's Aid, and International Media Support.
Enab Baladi also joined many alliances and coalitions:
The newspaper won two awards through two of its co-founders, Majd Sharbaji who won the U.S. State Department Women of Courage Award,[13] and Kholoud Helmi who won the 2015 Anna Politkovskaya Award.[14]
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