Format | Broadsheet |
---|---|
Editor-in-chief | Anwar Abdulrahman |
Founded | 1976 |
Political alignment | Pro-government; Arab Nationalist |
Language | Arabic |
Circulation | 37,000 (2013) |
Sister newspapers | Gulf Daily News |
Website | http://www.akhbar-alkhaleej.com/ |
Akhbar Al Khaleej (in Arabic أخبار الخليج meaning The Gulf News) is a Bahraini pro-government daily with an Arab nationalist slant. It is affiliated to the Prime Minister of Bahrain as well as the Egyptian Muslim Brotherhood. It is the sister paper of the English language daily, Gulf Daily News.
The first issue of Akhbar Al Khaleej was published on 1 February 1976. It is one of the Bahrain's oldest daily papers. The first editor-in-chief was Mahmud Al Mirdi and its staff composed of mainly Egyptian, Sudanese, and Bahraini journalists.
As of 2006 Anwar Abdul Rahman was the head of the paper. He also served as its editor in chief. The publisher is Dar Al Hilal which also publishes Gulf Daily News.
The daily is published in broadsheet format. The 1998 circulation of the daily was 25,000 copiesand it was 37,000 copies in 2013.
The paper is known to be close to Bahrain’s main leftist opposition party, National Democratic Action and its columnists include some of the country’s most prominent leftists such as Sameera Rajab and Mahmood Al Gassab, who is a leading member of the Jami'at al-Tajammu' al-Qawmi al-Dimuqrat, one of the four opposition societies to the government.
With its Arab nationalist stance, the newspaper has led condemnation of the United States’ invasion of Iraq, and has been particularly critical of those Iraqis who have cooperated with the American backed political order: Samira Rajab in 2005 dismissed Iraqi Shia cleric Grand Ayatollah Ali al-Sistani as an ‘American general’. This resulted in death threats towards Ms Rajab from Shia Islamists – who hold the Iraqi cleric in high regard – and brought to the surface political fissures in the alliance of Shia Islamists and ex-Marxists that had come together to oppose the 2002 Constitution.