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From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

Paul A. Ajlouny (born 1933) is a Palestinian-American publisher and businessman known for launching the now-defunct Palestinian newspaper Al Fajr in 1972 in Jerusalem.

Biography

Ajlouny was born in Ramallah, British Mandate Palestine in 1933, and immigrated to the United States in 1946. He earned a degree in engineering from the University of Kentucky in 1963.[citation needed]

Aljouny founded Al Fajr newspaper in 1967 to respond to the educated Palestinian professional elite who saw the PLO as their representative. The media environment in Palestine at that time was dominated by broadsheets published by the Jordanian government. In 1993, Columbia Journal Review described Al-Fajr as "gradually turning into a Palestinian version of Pravda", and the publication lost readership to more independent newspapers, Al-Quds and An-Nahar. Ajlouny ran Al Fajr from New York, and eventually he struggled to keep up with costs, and the paper was shut down on June 23, 1993. Ajlouny claimed he was losing $25,000 per month to keep it operational.[1]

In the 1970s, while living in Hempstead, Long Island, Ajlouny claimed to be an advisor to the PLO. In November 1979, a U.S. district court in Brooklyn found him guilty of attempting to smuggle stolen communications equipment to the Middle East in early 1978. The equipment, much of it owned by New York Telephone Company, was discovered by customs inspectors in April 1978. Federal prosecutors alleged that Aljouny's smuggling was part of a scheme to set up an independent telecommunications network for the PLO.[2]

References

  1. ^ Hadar, Leon (November–December 1993). "A free Palestinian press? The death of a daily marks a turning point". Columbia Journalism Review. 32: 4.
  2. ^ "Palestinian Found Guilty of Trying to Smuggle Equipment to the Mideast". Jewish Telegraphic Agency. 1979-11-26. Retrieved 5 October 2023.

External links


This page was last edited on 3 May 2024, at 14:11
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