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In 2002 Neil-Jones launched the Vanuatu Daily Post, the country's first daily newspaper. In 2006, the paper's sports editor Samuel Taffo was assaulted by a police officer. Neil-Jones demanded that the officer be suspended. In response, police officers arrested Neil-Jones at the newspaper office, and confined him to the maximum security gaol.
This is a list of newspapers in Vanuatu . L'Hebdo du Vanuatu. Nasara. Ni-Vanuatu. Pentecost Star. Port Vila Presse. Vanuatu Daily Post. The Vanuatu Independent [1] Vanuatu Times.
Israel–Hamas war protests in the United States. July 2024 protest in Washington, D.C. A series of protests occur across Washington, D.C., to protest a speech given by Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu to a joint session of the United States Congress. (Reuters) (WRC-TV) Israel–United States relations.
The Vanuatu Daily Post is a newspaper published in Port Vila in Vanuatu. It is the only daily newspaper in Vanuatu. It is the only daily newspaper in Vanuatu. The newspaper's founder, Marc Neil-Jones , had been the victim of physical attacks supported by government ministers during his time at the newspaper.
The Vanuatu Weekly is a state-owned paper published in all three national languages. The two main daily newspapers are both private: the Port Vila Presse (in French and in English), and the Vanuatu Daily Post (in English). The Daily Post has a sister weekly newspaper in French, L'Hebdo du Vanuatu.
The Trumpet, founded in about 1968 [2] The Sentinel, late 1980s/1990s, founded by Vere Bird Jr. [2] News Pages Antigua, founded in the 2000s [2] Carib Arena, founded in the 2000s, short-lived [2] Antigua Sun and Sun Weekend, founded in 1997 by Allen Stanford. Caribbean Times, in Antigua and Barbuda, ceased to publish in January 2018.
SYDNEY (Reuters) -Four Pacific Islands leaders arrived in Vanuatu on Tuesday to consider declaring a "neutral" position amid an intense contest between the United States and China, against the ...
The newspaper was launched by Gene Wong and Marc Neil-Jones of the anglophone Vanuatu Daily Post, with support from the European Union and the French embassy in Vanuatu. Its intended readership are francophone ni-Vanuatu, both in Vanuatu itself and in neighbouring, French-speaking New Caledonia. It also covers news from both countries.