Bells, chants launch Bhutan's first daily newspaper
THIMPHU, Bhutan (Reuters) - Buddhist monks prayed for the success of Bhutan's first daily newspaper, which was launched on Thursday but could take a week to reach remote areas of the tiny Himalayan nation carried on ponies and on foot.
Bhutan Today, an eight-page morning paper, is part of Bhutan's attempt to build a free press after its former monarch and fourth king, Jigme Singye Wangchuck, forced his largely unwilling subjects to accept democracy earlier this year.
Delivering copies of Bhutan Today will be a chore in a country with few passable roads, meaning newsagents will have to carry it to far-flung districts on foot and on horseback.
The paper has a cover price of five ngultrum, or about 10 cents.
Monks chanted prayers and rang bells and drums were banged as the newspaper's first copies rolled off the presses at an auspicious hour chosen by astrologers.
Bhutan's only newspaper until 2006 was a bi-weekly, state-run venture. Two privately owned papers entered the market later -- the bi-weekly Bhutan Times and the weekly Bhutan Observer.
There is fierce competition for the small advertising revenue generated in the country of about 700,000 people. There are virtually no private advertisers and only government agencies offer advertisements.
In its first editorial, Bhutan Today complained of unfair competition.
"They asked the Ministry of Information and Communications to deny us a license to operate," it read. Continued...
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