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Type | Daily newspaper |
---|---|
Format | Broadsheet |
Owner(s) | Naspers |
Publisher | Media24 |
Editor-in-chief | Barnard Beukman |
Sports editor | Gert van der Westhuizen |
Founded | 16 September 1974 |
Language | Afrikaans |
Headquarters | Johannesburg |
Sister newspapers | Die Burger,Volksblad |
Website | www |
Beeld (freely translated asPicture orImage) is anAfrikaans-languagedaily newspaper that was launched on 16 September 1974.Beeld is distributed in fourprovinces of South Africa:Gauteng,Mpumalanga,Limpopo andNorth West, previously part of the formerTransvaal province.Die Beeld (English:The Image) was an Afrikaans-language Sunday newspaper in the late 1960s.
The newspaper was aligned with theNational Party andapartheid policies.[1][2] In later years, the newspaper was seen to be more aligned with theDemocratic Party.[2]
In April 1981,Joseph Lelyveld ofThe New York Times praised Beeld editor Ton Vosloo over a "courageous" article he had recently written. Vosloo had written that theNational Party would eventually have to enter negotiations with the leadership of theAfrican National Congress. Significantly, Ton described the ANC as "the National Party of Black Nationalism."[1] In July 1981, the newspaper took issue withPiet Koornhof, minister responsible for black affairs inP.W. Botha's cabinet. Koornhof had reassured the white electorate that racially desegregated public spaces in white areas would not be "swamped" or "crowded out". He suggested racially segregated bridges and keeping facilities open to all races on weekdays and racially segregated on weekends, for the exclusive use of whites. The newspaper accused Koornhof of resurrecting "prehistoric debates" of the early apartheid era and questioned how the white minority can gain the support of nonwhites "if in 1981 we speak of separate bridges a la 1948."[3] In a January 1982 editorial by Vosloo, prior to the opening of parliament, he called on Prime MinisterP.W. Botha for political change: "We are waiting, Mr. Botha, we are waiting!"[4]
In June 2024Naspers announced that it would close the newspaper, along withCity Press,Rapport, and theDaily Sun, in October of that year due to declining newspaper sales.[5] A month later Media24 announced it will suspend the planned closures until theCompetition Commission approves of its plan to sell newspaper distribution company On-The-Dot to Novus, which was the reason behind the papers' planned shuttering.[6] The last print edition was published on Friday 21 December 2024, and it is now available online only.
2008 | 2014 | |
---|---|---|
Eastern Cape | ||
Free State | Y | Y |
Gauteng | Y | Y |
Kwa-Zulu Natal | Y | N |
Limpopo | Y | Y |
Mpumalanga | Y | Y |
North West | Y | Y |
Net Sales | |
---|---|
2000 | 100 000[5] |
Oct – Dec 2012 | 66 132 |
Jul – Sep 2012 | 70 070 |
Apr – Jun 2012 | 73 595 |
Jan – Mar 2012 | 75 019 |
Oct – Dec 2013 | 64 874 |
Jul – Sep 2013 | 64 329 |
Apr – Jun 2013 | 64 073 |
Jan – Mar 2013 | 67 700 |
Jan – Mar 2014 | 62 766[9] |
Apr – Jun 2014 | 59 544 |
Jan – Mar 2015 | 51 064[9] |
2024 | 20 000[5] |
AIR | |
---|---|
Jan 2012 – Dec 2012 | 441 000 |
Jan 2013 – Dec 2013 | 485 000 |
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