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Kayhan

Kayhan
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Type Daily newspaper
Format Broadsheet
Owner(s) Keyhan Institute
Founder(s) Abdul-Rahman Faramarzi and Mostafa Mesbahzadeh
Editor Hossein Shariatmadari
Staff writers 1,500
Founded February 1943; 74 years ago (1943)
Political alignment Pro-Constitution, Principalist, Conservative
Headquarters Shahcheraghi Street, Ferdowsi Street, Tehran, Iran
Circulation 36,000 Daily (2015)
OCLC number 473890618
Website kayhannews.ir

Kayhan (Persian: کيهان‎‎, English: The Cosmos) is an influential newspaper in Iran. It is considered "the most conservative Iranian newspaper."

Hossein Shariatmadari is the editor-in-chief of Kayhan. His official position is representative of the Supreme Leader.

Its 2007 circulation was about 70,000, with about 1,000 employees worldwide. Kayhan also publishes special foreign editions, which include the English-language Kayhan International. Its circulation in 2008 is estimated to be 350,000.

Kayhan was founded in February 1943 by owner Abdul-Rahman Faramarzi and Mostafa Mesbahzadeh as editor-in-chief. Later the roles of Faramarzi and Mesbahzadeh were reversed. Published in Iran as well as in London, the newspaper had a circulation greater than one-million prior to the 1979 Islamic Revolution.

After the overthrow of the Shah all of Mesbahzadeh's assets were seized, including the publishing plant, which was the main headquarters of the daily. In May 1980, Ayatollah Khomenei named Ebrahim Yazdi, then foreign minister, as head of the daily. Under the guidance of Mesbahzadeh, the London office of Kayhan continued its work and publishes a monarchist weekly issue known as Kayhan London, which has a small circulation. In 2006, Mesbahzadeh died at the age of 98 in Los Angeles, California.

The paper focuses on political, cultural, social and economic news.

Kayhan supports the Iranian government and the policies of former President Mahmoud Ahmadinejad. Shariatmadari stated that the newspaper and its staff "defend the ideology of the Islamic Revolution." Gareth Smyth, the former Iran correspondent of the Financial Times, contends that Kayhan articulates the political views of the "regime's fundamentalist camp."The New York Times correspondent Michael Slackman writes that the newspaper "offers insight into the most extreme views of Iran’s leaders and into the mind-set and plans of those who are at the center of power." A former editor of Kayhan, Mahmoud Shamsolvaezin, a "reformist" and a staunch anti government activist, states, "The truth is, Kayhan is an intelligence newspaper." That is the standard rebuke offered by the reformist camp, which increasingly includes various extremist and opposition groups like the People's Mujahedin of Iran and various monarchist and separatist groups like Pejak and Koumaleh and Jondollah.


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