Kathmandu, Dec. 15
The Rising Nepal (TRN), the first broadsheet English daily published from Nepal by the Gorkhapatra Corporation, has met the milestone of six decades in publication as it is turning 60 on Monday, December 16.
It is also the longest-running English daily in the
country although it was the third English newspaper following ‘Motherland’ and
'The Commoner', both published in tabloid size.
The state-owned newspaper was launched by the then King Mahendra in 1965 (1 Poush 2022 BS) with the aim of catering to the need of English readers within the country and inform foreigners about Nepal and its culture.
The government also needed The
Rising Nepal in broadsheet format as it had to reach out to the English
newspapers published in India to publish advertisements in English.
Still today, the
newspaper is striving to cater to fulfill the information needs of its readers
on a national and international scale with the national and public interest at
the centre. The first editorial of TRN also mentioned that its objective was to
inform the friends of Nepal across the globe about the correct perspective of
Nepal and its people.
While the newspaper has
not been successful in adopting all of the recent conceptual and technological
changes in the print media industry, it still has relevance for all generations
of people. "Although the digital media is convenient and handy, there
isn't a need to panic about the future of the newspaper industry. This is
because TRN is a gateway to get the government and public views without
speculation and distortion," said Bijaya Lal Shrestha, former editor of
The Rising Nepal.
This newspaper also has
a privilege of being the sister publication of Gorkhapatra daily, the first
newspaper of the country which is in publication for 124 years. According to
former editors, this daily also enjoyed greater editorial freedom compared to
its sister publication.
"Fact-based
journalism has been the hallmark of TRN although it couldn't have been critical
in some of the issues. It is the medium that reported the events in
straight-forward manner," said Shrestha.
The restoration of
democracy in 1990 paved the way for private media which thrived in the liberal
environment while various English and vernacular newspapers attracted the
readers with better design and content packaging but this state-owned newspaper
retained its traditional design and look which got a facelift just about a
decade ago.
The daily had added four
pages and started regular 12-page publication apart from weekly supplement of
4-page every Friday but it shrunk to eight pages in the aftermath of the
COVID-19 pandemic. However, the efforts in the last one decade put to revamp
the design and content presentation have given a better design and readability
with more liberty on using photos and graphics.
Former editor Jagadish
Pokhrel, who also led the initiative, said that the aim was to diversify the
content of the newspaper to meet the taste of a large variety of audiences.
The Rising Nepal comes
with pages for business, op-ed, international news, art and culture, sports,
and a 4-page weekly supplement.
Speaking on various
occasions planned by TRN, former editors and contributors have suggested the
daily to run in the model of the British Broadcasting Corporation.
Shrestha suggested that
the Gorkhapatra management should consider its publications as the main pillars
of the organization, not just like some other departments.
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