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Al Akhbar (Lebanon)

Daily newspaper in Lebanon


Summary

Daily newspaper in Lebanon

FieldValue
imageAl-Akhbar logo.svg
typeDaily newspaper
formatSemi Tabloid
chief_editorIbrahim Al Amin
founded2006
publisherAkhbar Beirut
headquartersRue Verdun, Beirut
websiteArabic
languageArabic
political_positionAnti-Zionism
Anti-Americanism
Anti-imperialism
pro-Palestinian
pro-Hezbollah
March 8 Alliance
Anti-Syrian Opposition
Ba'athist Syria

English Anti-Americanism Anti-imperialism pro-Palestinian pro-Hezbollah March 8 Alliance Anti-Syrian Opposition Ba'athist Syria

Al Akhbar (; ) is a daily Arabic language newspaper published in a semi tabloid format in Beirut. The newspaper's writers have included Ibrahim Al Amine, As'ad AbuKhalil, Amal Saad-Ghorayeb, Sharmine Narwani, Pierre Abi Saab, and Amer Mohsen. It is generally considered to be supportive of Hezbollah and opposes the regional policies of Saudi Arabia, the United States, and the Lebanese March 14 Political Alliance.

Al Akhbars English-language section was temporarily discontinued on 6 March 2015, in part due to a lack of funds. In May 2025, the newspaper made an announcement that it had relaunched its English section.

History and profile

The newspaper began to be published and distributed in 2006, and is registered with the same license of the paper of the same name, established in 1953, owned by Akhbar Beirut S.A.L. (News of Beirut). It was established by the late Joseph Samaha (a leftist intellectual and former editor-in-chief of As-Safir) and Ibrahim Al Amin (also a leftist journalist and political analyst). A 2009 survey by Ipsos Stat established that the daily is among the five most popular newspapers in Beirut.

In December 2010, Al Akhbar received and published an advance copy of the US State Department cables leak, after which the newspaper's website was hacked. Following this attack, the paper shut down its website for a while. The paper's online version was the 12th most visited website for 2010 in the MENA region.

On 18 July 2011 the paper together with As Safir, another daily published in Lebanon, was banned in Syria.

Orientation

Al Akhbar declares its political orientation as independent and progressive, supporting movements working for independence, freedom, and social justice, and against war and occupation, in Lebanon and around the world. The social justice commitment includes publication of articles and columns advancing women's and gay rights. In his "Comprehensive Guide to Lebanese Media," journalist Deen Sharp describes Al Akhbar as "critical of all Lebanese groups," but "perceived as pro-March 8th," a coalition of political parties in Lebanon that includes Hezbollah and the Free Patriotic Movement.

In 2010, Ibrahim Al Amine, editorial chairman of Al Akhbar, described the founding ambitions of the newspaper: "We wanted the U.S. ambassador to wake up in the morning, read it and get upset.” Responding in a letter to The New York Times, Jeffrey Feltman, who was US ambassador to Lebanon when Al Amine made the remark, wrote that Al Amine "did get my attention, but not in the way he intended. The hilariously erroneous accounts of my activities reported as fact in his newspaper provoked morning belly laughs." Later, in 2013, Al Amine attacked the U.S. as "the main source of policies of oppression, hegemony, and injustice in the world."

Marwan Hamadeh, a member of the 14 March Alliance and a deputy in Lebanon's legislature, and news reports in publications such as The New York Times and Wall Street Journal have described Al Akhbar as pro-Hezbollah. Former US ambassador Feltman wrote in early 2011 that Al Akhbar romanticized and never criticized Hezbollah leader Hassan Nasrallah.

New York Times journalist Mark Ashurst described the newspaper as having "close links to the government" of President Bashar al-Assad of Syria." A reporter for the same newspaper, Robert Worth in 2010, wrote that Al Akhbar newspaper "has become the most dynamic and daring in Lebanon, and perhaps anywhere in the Arab world," but criticized the publication for "news pages that often show a loose mingling of fact, rumor and opinion."

Controversies

Max Blumenthal

Max Blumenthal joined Al Akhbar in late 2011 primarily to write about Israel-Palestine issues and foreign-policy debates in Washington.

Blumenthal left Al Akhbar in June 2012 in protest at Al Akhbars coverage of the Syrian Civil War. In an interview with The Real News he said that "It was too much to have my name and reputation associated with open Assad apologists when the scale of atrocities had become so extreme and when the editor-in-chief of Al-Akhbar was offering friendly advice to Bashar al-Assad on the website of Al-Akhbar, you know, painting him as this kind of genuine, earnest reformer who just needed to get rid of the bad men around him and cut out some of the rich oligarchs who happened to be his cousins, and then everything would be fine. That was ridiculous." Blumenthal highlighted editorials by Amal Saad-Ghorayeb and Sharmine Narwani. Blumenthal said that Al Akhbar had seen "a major exodus of key staffers at Al-Akhbar over the Syrian issue. ... the conflict over Syria has divided the Lebanese left. And so the debates at Al-Akhbar really reflected the debates inside the Lebanese left. And what it came to [pass] this spring, apparently, was that the pro-Assad faction, which saw him and his regime as an anti-imperialist bulwark, had more or less won out, although some dissident voices remain." Blumenthal said it "gave me more latitude than any paper in the United States to write about" the Israeli–Palestinian conflict, He added Al Akhbar "still remains, in some respects, a valuable publication on a lot of issues, like, for example, the abuse of domestic workers inside Lebanon, which is a plague and very few other publications report on" the issue.

Blumenthal has since changed his position on Syria and apologized to Sharmine Narwani and other editors he had criticized in 2012.

Special Tribunal for Lebanon

On 31 January 2014, the Special Tribunal for Lebanon for the assassination of the Lebanese Prime Minister Rafic Hariri, located in the Netherlands, indicted the newspaper and its editor Ibrahim Mohamed Al Amin, ordering them to answer various charges in front of the court, on charges of contempt of the court and obstruction of justice after the newspaper published two articles pretending to reveal confidential information on protected witnesses. The newspaper was fined Al Amin completed sentence of a €20,000 fine against him on 14 August 2014. Both fines were for contempt of court.

References

References

  1. "Al Akhbar". The Arab Press Network.
  2. "Amal Saad-Ghorayeb". Al-Akhbar English.
  3. "Sharmine Narwani". Al-Akhbar English.
  4. [https://lebanon.mom-gmr.org/en/media/detail/outlet/al-akhbar-2/ "Al-Akhbar,"] Media Ownership Monitor, 2024.
  5. (6 March 2015). "Al-Akhbar pulls plug on English site". The Daily Star.
  6. (1 May 2025). ""الأخبار" تطلق موقعها بالإنكليزية".
  7. "Lebanon. Media Landscape". European Journalism Center.
  8. Dot-Pouillard, Nicolas. "Joseph Samaha's reflections on nationalism, the left and Islam". The New Arab.
  9. (15 March 2012). "Mapping Digital Media: Lebanon". Open Society Foundations.
  10. [https://web.archive.org/web/20101212215429/http://www.google.com/hostednews/ap/article/ALeqM5iiApx0WCjhC3YgpoKwixdwla52CQ?docId=08be517e002a4a3ebb426c5bfa1b875e Lebanese paper's website attacked over WikiLeaks] [[Associated Press]], 9 December 2010
  11. (10 December 2010). "Al-Akhbar newspaper shuts down website following hack attack". The Daily Star.
  12. (9 April 2013). "WikiLeaks publishes 1.7 million "Kissinger Cables"". Al Akhbar.
  13. (28 October 2010). "Forbes Releases Top 50 MENA Online Newspapers; Lebanon Fails to Make Top 10". Jad Aoun.
  14. (2011). "Press and Cultural Freedom in Lebanon, Syria, Jordan and Palestine". SKeyes.
  15. "About Us". Al Akbar.
  16. (1 January 2013). "On Ziad Rahbani, Al Akhbar, and the Left". Al Akhbar English.
  17. [http://www.al-akhbar.com/ar/taxonomy/term/15606,18560 خاص بمناسبة مئويّة اليوم العالمي للمرأة: نصف العالم أنـصاف مواطنات] {{Webarchive. link. (2 November 2010 ''Al Akhbar'', 8 March 2010)
  18. [http://www.al-akhbar.com/ar/node/142867 ماذا لو كان ابني مثلياً؟] ''Al Akhbar'', 20 June 2009
  19. [http://issuu.com/deensharp/docs/final_media_lebanon_independent_media A Comprehensive Guide to Lebanese Media] Deen Sharp, ''issuu'', 2009
  20. Worth, Robert F.. (29 December 2010). "A Rarity in Its Region, a Lebanese Paper Dares to Provoke". The New York Times.
  21. (9 January 2011). "Heroic Journalism in Lebanon? Ex-Envoy Disagrees". The New York Times.
  22. (22 January 2013). "Hamadeh denounces Al-Akhbar threats against his life". Ya Libnan.
  23. [http://magazine.wsj.com/features/beirut-is-the-new-beirut/5/ Beirut is the new Beirut] ''The Wall Street Journal'', 2 December 2010
  24. link. (10 June 2015 As'ad AbuKhalil, ''Al Akhbar'', 26 July 2012)
  25. [http://english.al-akhbar.com/node/16649 Nasrallah’s Speech on Palestine] {{Webarchive. link. (10 June 2015 As'ad AbuKhalil, ''Al Akhbar'', 6 August 2013)
  26. Ashurst, Mark M.. (11 July 2012). "Purported Minutes Show Assad Skeptical of Annan Peace Plan". The New York Times.
  27. Di Giovanni, Janine. (16 October 2018). "Why Assad and Russia Target the White Helmets". The New York Review of Books.
  28. The Real News, 22 June 2012, [https://web.archive.org/web/20120626142930/http://therealnews.com/t2/index.php?option=com_content&task=view&id=31&Itemid=74&jumival=8493 Max Blumenthal Resigns Al Akhbar Over Syria Coverage ]
  29. Blumenthal, Max. (June 20, 2012). "The right to resist is universal: A farewell to Al Akhbar and Assad's apologists". Max Blumenthal.
  30. "Syria is not Palestine; anti-Salafism/Wahhabism is not Islamophobia - with Rania Khalek (Ep. 18)".
  31. (5 September 2016). "STL-14-06/S/CJ: ''In the Case against Akhbar Beirut S.A.L. and Ibrahim Mohamed Al Amin'' Reasons for Sentencing Judgment". STL.
  32. (31 January 2014). "STL-14-06/I/CJ: ''In the Case against Akhbar Beirut S.A.L. and Ibrahim Mohamed Al Amin'' Redacted Version of Decision in Proceedings for Contempt with Orders in Lieu of an Indictment". STL.
  33. (12 October 2018). "STL-14-06/ES/CJ: ''In the Case against Akhbar Beirut S.A.L. and Ibrahim Mohamed Al Amin'' Order Lifting Confidentiality". STL.
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