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Iran (newspaper)
Iran (Persian: ایران) is a Persian-language and the official daily newspaper of the government of Iran.
Iran was launched in 1995. The Islamic Republic News Agency (IRNA) owns and publishes Iran. Iran's affiliated website is Iran Network. IRNA also publishes Iran Daily, an English-language daily newspaper, Alvefagh, an Arabic newspaper, Irane varzeshi, a sport daily newspaper, and Irane Sepid for blind people. The newspaper supports the policies of the government and is described as a pro-government conservative daily.
The daily was managed by Mosayeb Naeemi during the presidency of Mahmoud Ahmadinejad. Following the 2013 presidential election Mohammad Taqi Roghaniha, CEO of Iran Cultural and Press Institute (ICPI), was appointed manager of the daily.
Iran was closed down by the Press Supervisory Board in May 2006 following its publication a caricature which was deemed to be "divisive and provocative". The caricature which mocked Azeris caused stir among Azeri people living in the country. In response both the artist who had drawn the caricature and the editor-in-chief were arrested. The paper was banned again for six months by an Iranian court due to its alleged false report in June 2013.
This newspaper joined the Twitter social network as one of the Iranian newspapers in October 2016 and has since started publishing the newspaper's news and articles on this social network. The Iran Newspaper account was officially approved by Twitter in November 2016. As of February 1, 2019, the number of followers of this account has reached 104,700.
"Iran Network Website" was an Iranian news website owned by the Iranian Cultural and Press Institute that operated from 2007 to the end of 2013. Nearly 30 people worked on this website. According to Alexa data, the website's URL, inn.ir, ranked 674th among the most visited Iranian websites.
Khatoon's special issue controversy Following the publication of a 258-page special issue of the Iran newspaper called "Vijehnameh Khatoon 1" in August 2011, a number of political activists accused the authors of this special issue of questioning the black veil, which in the Islamic Republic of Iran is referred to as the "superior Islamic veil."
The most newsworthy article published in this special issue was an interview with Mehdi Kalhor, who considered the black color of the veil to be an imitation of the black clothing worn by Western men and women in the "nightly orgy parties of Europe" during the time of Nasser al-Din Shah, and said: "In terms of the philosophy of hijab, which states in the Quran that a woman should not expose herself to the gaze of men, the veil is definitely the worst form of clothing because it frames a woman's face."
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Iran (newspaper)
Iran (Persian: ایران) is a Persian-language and the official daily newspaper of the government of Iran.
Iran was launched in 1995. The Islamic Republic News Agency (IRNA) owns and publishes Iran. Iran's affiliated website is Iran Network. IRNA also publishes Iran Daily, an English-language daily newspaper, Alvefagh, an Arabic newspaper, Irane varzeshi, a sport daily newspaper, and Irane Sepid for blind people. The newspaper supports the policies of the government and is described as a pro-government conservative daily.
The daily was managed by Mosayeb Naeemi during the presidency of Mahmoud Ahmadinejad. Following the 2013 presidential election Mohammad Taqi Roghaniha, CEO of Iran Cultural and Press Institute (ICPI), was appointed manager of the daily.
Iran was closed down by the Press Supervisory Board in May 2006 following its publication a caricature which was deemed to be "divisive and provocative". The caricature which mocked Azeris caused stir among Azeri people living in the country. In response both the artist who had drawn the caricature and the editor-in-chief were arrested. The paper was banned again for six months by an Iranian court due to its alleged false report in June 2013.
This newspaper joined the Twitter social network as one of the Iranian newspapers in October 2016 and has since started publishing the newspaper's news and articles on this social network. The Iran Newspaper account was officially approved by Twitter in November 2016. As of February 1, 2019, the number of followers of this account has reached 104,700.
"Iran Network Website" was an Iranian news website owned by the Iranian Cultural and Press Institute that operated from 2007 to the end of 2013. Nearly 30 people worked on this website. According to Alexa data, the website's URL, inn.ir, ranked 674th among the most visited Iranian websites.
Khatoon's special issue controversy Following the publication of a 258-page special issue of the Iran newspaper called "Vijehnameh Khatoon 1" in August 2011, a number of political activists accused the authors of this special issue of questioning the black veil, which in the Islamic Republic of Iran is referred to as the "superior Islamic veil."
The most newsworthy article published in this special issue was an interview with Mehdi Kalhor, who considered the black color of the veil to be an imitation of the black clothing worn by Western men and women in the "nightly orgy parties of Europe" during the time of Nasser al-Din Shah, and said: "In terms of the philosophy of hijab, which states in the Quran that a woman should not expose herself to the gaze of men, the veil is definitely the worst form of clothing because it frames a woman's face."