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Madhyamam

From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
Malayalam-language newspaper published in Kerala, India

Madhyamam
Front page ofMadhyamam, 9 April 2009
TypeDaily newspaper
FormatBroadsheet
PublisherIdeal Publication Trust
Editor-in-chiefO. Abdurahman
EditorVM Ibraheem
Founded1987
Political alignmentCentre-Left
LanguageMalayalam
HeadquartersSilver Hills,Kozhikode, Kerala, India
CirculationAbove 350,000 daily
Sister newspapersMadhyamam Weekly
Websitemadhyamam.com

Madhyamam (meaningMedium) is a Malayalam-language newspaper published inKerala, India, since 1987.[1] It was founded by Ideal Publications Trust run by theJamaat-e-Islami Hind wing in Kerala.[2][3] It has nine editions in India (seven in Kerala and one each in Mangalore[4] and Bangalore) and itsPersian Gulf editionGulf Madhyamam has nine in the Middle East.

According to Indian Readership Survey 2021[5] and IRS 2010 Q4, it is the fourth popular newspaper in Kerala with a circulation of 1.5 lakhs and readership of 6 lakhs.[6][7]

The newspaper and its team of journalists have secured nearly ninety awards includingRamnath Goenka Journalism Award,Statesman Award for Rural Reporting,PUCL Journalism Award for Human Rights, ESR World Journalism Prize and theAsian Development Bank Institute (ADBI) Developing Asia Journalism Award.[8]

Ownership

[edit]

Madhyamam is owned by the Ideal Publications Trust underJamaat-e-Islami.[9] The trust claims as their aim "providing non-profit non-partisan and value-based journalistic service free from market pressures".[8] The non-profit nature of the ownership, it says ensures the paper stays free of market compulsions of a business concern and be selective in the advertisements it publishes.[8]

History

[edit]
First issue of the Madhyamam daily.
First issue ofMadhyamam

Madhyamam began publishing in 1987 at Silver Hills near Calicut. Veteran journalistKuldip Nayar inaugurated the newspaper.[10][11]Vaikom Muhammad Basheer, Malayalam writer, described it as "the birth of a silver star".

The opening editorial on 1 June 1987 read:[8]

Madhyamam comes to you, the reader, with a clear sense of purpose... Mass media are today passing through a period of degeneration. This sphere is not an exception to the general deterioration of values. The face of truth is being concealed behind the glitter of gold. In this murky situation we offer wholesome journalism reflective of a healthy worldview.

The second edition was launched in July 1993 at Cochin, followed by the third at Trivandrum in April 1996.[12]Gulf Madhyamam was first published from Bahrain in 1998 and then from Dubai in 2002.[13]

K C Abdullah,P K Balakrishnan, and K A Kodungallur were among its early editors. Renowned writerC Radhakrishnan served as its consultant editor from 1997 to 1999.[14]O Abdurahman is the current editor ofMadhyamam, and PA Abdul Hakeem is the publisher in charge. VK Hamza Abbas is the chief editor ofGulf Madhyamam.[15] Media critique Dr. K Yasin Ashraf is the associate editor of Madhyamam.

Supplements

[edit]
Cover page ofMadhyamam Weekly

Apart from the daily edition,Madhyamam has an online edition at madhyamam.com and also publishes various supplements:

  • Varadya Madhyamam, a weekend supplement
  • Kudumba Madhyamam[16] (Family Madhyamam), focussing on family and children
  • Thozhil Madhyamam, a career supplement
  • Vidhyabhyasa Madhyamam, an education supplement
  • Info Madhyamam, an IT supplement
  • Madhyamam Annual, an annual supplement
  • Madhyamam Vidhya, an educational supplement
  • Ruchi, a Recipe Magazine
  • Upabhokthr (Consumer) Madhyamam, a business supplement
  • Velicham, a school supplement[17]

Growth

[edit]

Madhyamam has the fourth largest circulation in Kerala, and combined withGulf Madhyamam, the market leader amongst Malayalam newspapers in the Middle East,[18][19] has the third largest circulation amongst Malayalam newspapers.[1][20]

It now has nine editions in India: inKozhikode,Thiruvananthapuram,Kottayam,Kochi,Malappuram,Kannur,Thrissur,Bangalore,Mangalore and Mumbai. The edition at Thrissur was inaugurated on 18 August 2009 by the Defence Minister of IndiaA.K Antony.[21] In April 2011, the paper expanded to its 10th edition in India from Mumbai. TheGovernor ofMaharashtra State handed over a copy to Oscar award winnerResul Pookutty.[22]

Gulf Madhyamam

[edit]

Gulf Madhyamam, a subsidiary, is the first international Indian newspaper and most popular Malayalam newspaper in the Middle East, with more editions in thePersian Gulf countries than any other daily in the Middle East.[19] It is published from four locations in Saudi Arabia (Riyadh, Dammam, Jeddah and Abha), one in the UAE (Dubai), one in Oman (Muscat), and from Bahrain, Kuwait and Qatar.[23]

Okaz group, a leading media conglomerate in Saudi Arabia, has tied up with theGulf Madhyamam Daily, the No.1 Malayalam daily in the Middle East. It is published from nine centres in thePersian Gulf region, with four editions in Saudi Arabia. The partnership will enable both media houses to enhance their distribution network.[24]

Other publications

[edit]

In October 2001, Madyamam Health launched a healthcare scheme for the poor, "Santhwanam", and has so far reportedly spent more than Rs 30 million to treat almost 5000 patients.[25]

Kudumbam is the Lifestyle monthly family magazine, Ruchi is a recipe and health Magazine, Madhyamam Vidhya is an annual educational Magazine, Madhyamam Online is a Malayalam online News portal and Madhyamam English is an English online news portal.

Television channel

[edit]

The Madhyamam Group also runs a Malayalam-language news-cum-entertainment television channel namedMedia One TV. The channel was licensed in September 2011 and was officially launched on 10 February 2013. The main studio is located at Velliparamba,Kozhikode.[26]

Awards and honours

[edit]
ADBI Award-winning article inVaradya Madhyamam, published on 15 October 2006

TheMadhyamam team has won numerous national and international awards for its contribution to journalism and in particular issues of agriculture, rural development and human rights.

International honours

Savad Rahman, a sub-editor atMadhyamam, won the Development Journalist of the Year prize at the Developing Asia Journalism Awards (DAJA), sponsored by theAsian Development Bank Institute (ADBI). An article on the plight of women trapped in the brothels of Mumbai earned him the prize.[27] He also won the Diversity and Equal Opportunity special prize at the ESR World Journalism Prize 2007 for his feature "Bant Singh The Lion of Mansa", aboutBant Singh, aDalit activist in Punjab.[28][29]won a silver medal for Tokyo Olympics print design competition[30] 2021 conducted by newspaperdesign.in

National awards

P.K. Prakash, a senior staff reporter since 1996, won the 23rd "Journalism for Human Rights" award instituted by thePeople's Union for Civil Liberties (PUCL) in 2003. His reports on the Adivasi land issue inMuthanga,[31] the illegal kidney trade in Kerala,[32] prisoner torture at theAluva Sub-jail, and the illegal viagra experiments on infants at a private hospital in Kochi[33] earned him the award.[34][35] He also earned a special mention from the PUCL award committee the previous year.[36]

His article series "Choothattam Thudarunna vipani" (The continuing gambles of the market, published 26–30 Oct 2007), explaining the impact of globalisation on the remote corners of rural India, and "Bhoomiyude jaathi" (Caste of the land), an analytical study on the impact ofland reforms on the Dalit population in Kerala, won him "The Statesman Award for the Best Rural Reporting – First Prize" (2007),[37][38] and theRamnath Goenka "Excellence in Journalism Awards for Regional Languages 2007–2008" – Print category.[39][40] He also received the 12th National Media Fellowship instituted by the National Foundation for India, a Rs. 100,000 grant for conducting studies on the plight ofadivasis in theKerala model of development.[41]

MJ Babu, a senior reporter of Madhyamam since 1993, twice won "The Statesman Award for the Best Rural Reporting", first in 1998 and then in 2008. His series of articles titled "Pattanam gramathodu cheyyunnath" (What a city does to a village, published:7–9 April 2008) won him the 2008 award. The series was about the sorry plight of the people living around the Canoli canal of the Chakkamkandam Lake inGuruvayoor where all the waste including human excreta from the city were dumped making it a breeding ground for many diseases. It also highlighted how paddy cultivation near Guruvayoor was destroyed due to pollution.[42]

State government awards

PK Prakash won the 2007 Ambedkar Media Award instituted by theGovernment of Kerala, for his report on "Bhoomiyude jaathi" (Caste of the land), an analytical study on the impact ofland reforms on the Dalit population in Kerala.[43] He also won the same in 2004 for his investigative report on the illegal kidney trade in Kerala.[44]

Jisha Elizabeth, a reporter at the daily, won the award in 2009 for her article series on a tribal colony working its way to join the mainstream of society with the help of the government.[45]

Razak Thazhathangadi, press photographer at the newspaper, won the State Media Award 2003 in the news photography category for his photographs titled "Niram Maratha Nimisham" (The moment which did not change colour).[46]

N P Jishar, Senior correspondent, won the media award constituted by the Department of Culture, Govt of Kerala, for best reporting inInternational Film Festival of Kerala in December 2010,[47][48] and a media award for state school Kalolsavam reporting constituted by Department of Education, Government of Kerala 2010.

Press Club / Press Academy awards

Madhyamam reporter Akbarali Puthunagaram won the Theruvath Raman Award 2006 instituted by the Calicut Press Club for his work "Super Chikiltsa, Hitech Kolla" (Superior treatment, Hi-Tech exploitation), which appeared between 31 August to 5 September 2006.[49]

Assistant Editor T P Cheruppa won the award in 2007 for his editorial "Nellu Mlechamo" (Is paddy shameful? – 11 Dec 2007).[50]

Sub-editor G Prajesh Sen won the award in 2008 for his work "Vadakathottiyile Vilppanatharatt", which appeared in the paper from 31 July to 6 August 2008.[51] PK Prakash andPrajesh Sen also won the R. Krishnaswamy Journalism Award, jointly instituted by theKeralashabdam weekly and the Kollam Press Club, in 2007[52] and 2009 respectively.[53] The two also won the V. Karunakaran Nambiar Award instituted byKerala Press Academy in 2007 (PK Prakash)[54] and 2009 (Prajesh Sen).[55]

Reporter N P Jishar received the Chowwara Parameswran award of the press academy in 2008 for the serial named "Karshaka paadangalil kaliman khananam". He also received the First Best reporter award constituted by government of Kerala in state school festival, 2008.

PK Prakash won the first C.P. Mammu Endowment award 2006 instituted by the Ernakulam Press Club for his story "Bhoomiyude jaathi" (Caste of the land).[56]

TP Cheruppa won the maiden Kambissery Memorial Journalism Award instituted by theKollam Press Club in 2006 for the best editorial in a Malayalam daily. The chosen editorial was "Irayakkapedunna Shaishavam"(Victimizing childhood), which appeared inMadhayamam on 24 June 2006.[57]

MJ Babu received the Dr Moorkkannoor Narayanan Award instituted by the Kerala Press Academy, the Oorja Kerala Award and the Farm Journalism Award instituted by the State unit of the Indian Veterinary Association.[58][59]

Printing centres/Editions

[edit]

Kozhikode,Thiruvananthapuram,Kochi,Thrissur,Kottayam,Kannur,Malappuram,Bangalore,Dubai,Qatar,Bahrain,Kuwait,Jeddah,Riyadh,Dammam,Abha, andOman

Controversies and criticisms

[edit]

Email snooping incident

[edit]

A controversy arose afterMadhyamam Weekly reported that police had sought passwords and login details of accounts from various service providers like Gmail, Yahoo, Hotmail, Rediffmail and Asianet India, among others. Alleging that it was an attempt at religious profiling, the daily claimed that 268 email accounts had been subjected to surveillance, out of which 258 belonged to Muslims. None among them had any previous criminal background and there was no clarity as to why they were put under surveillance, the newspaper stated. A probe was ordered after leading Muslim organisations in Kerala demanded Chief Minister Oommen Chandy's explanation in this issue as he is handling the Home Affairs.

Chandy said thatMadhyamam Weekly had not published the complete list, and provided the lists after removing the emails of people belonging to other communities. He said the weekly must come clear on this. The investigating officers got 268 mail IDs from a person and they were handed over to the hi-tech cell for tracing the identity, and no hacking attempt was made, he added.[60]

Insulting religious sentiments case

[edit]

In accordance with an order from theErnakulam judicial first magistrate court, on 11 March 2014,Kerala Police registered a case againstMadhyamam and other media organizations in response to a petition regarding allegations raised againstMata Amritanandaymayi,[61] accusing them of insulting religious sentiments.Madhyamam was booked under Sections 153A, 153B, 295A, 298, 120B and 34 of theIndian Penal Code.[62]

Taliban support

[edit]

The newspaper was widely criticised for gloryfyingTaliban takeover of Afghanistan in 2021. It reported the news of US retreat from Afghanistan following thefall of Kabul with the title 'Free Afghan'.[63][64]

Other publications

[edit]

Madhyamam Weekly has been a literary and political magazine since 1998. It claims a circulation of 25,000 copies each week.[20] The magazine contains regular columns of prominent writers likeMaythil Radhakrishnan ("Moonnu Vara"), Viju V Nair ("Vellezhuthu"), KEN Kunhahammad ("Idapedal") and Babu Bharadwaj ("Vazhipokkante Vaakkukal").

It gave new insight into the murder ofNaxal Varghese, a 1970s leader of theCPI (ML) in Kerala during theEmergency of 1975–1977. A penitent policeman in the Kerala Police, Constable Ramachandran Nair dictated a confessional note to M.K. Jayadevan which was later handed over to "Gro" Vasu,[65] an erstwhileNaxalite who later published it inMadhyamam Weekly.[8][66][67] The letter was then used an important evidence in the Supreme Court of IndiaP. Vijayan vs State of Kerala case.[65]

See also

[edit]

References

[edit]
  1. ^abRegistrar of Newspapers of IndiaArchived 20 November 2016 at theWayback Machine. (PDF).
  2. ^"CPI(M) invokes Israel factor to consolidate among Muslims".India Today. 1 April 2009. Retrieved5 July 2011.
  3. ^Johny, Stanly (23 July 2016)."Mystery of the missing twenty-one".The Hindu. Retrieved4 September 2021.According to O. Abdurahman, Editor of Madhyamam daily and Group Editor of MediaOne channel, both run by Jamaat-e-Islami Hind Kerala
  4. ^"Malayalam Newspaper Mangalore Edition". E-paper Mathrubhumi. Retrieved13 September 2018.
  5. ^Top 5 Malayalam Dailies: Indian Readership Survey (IRS) 2021 – Round 1
  6. ^"IRS 2021 Q3 All Dailies in Kerala since IRS 2021 R2".
  7. ^"Q4 2010 Afaqs.com (8 December 2010)".[permanent dead link]
  8. ^abcdeAbout Us – MadhyamamArchived 17 February 2010 at theWayback Machine
  9. ^"Madhyamam: A Muslim media success story".Rediff. 12 March 2009. Retrieved5 July 2011.
  10. ^"Madhyamam – History".madhyamam.com. Retrieved11 August 2017.
  11. ^Madhyamam- media revolution in the south. Milligazette.com (15 July 2004).
  12. ^Municipal Corporation of Trivandrum, Publications profile
  13. ^The National – The news that changed everything.The National (Abu Dhabi). (16 October 2013).
  14. ^Welcome to the home page of C. RadhakrishnanArchived 18 December 2009 at theWayback Machine. C-radhakrishnan.info (15 February 1939).
  15. ^India urged to repatriate undocumented Indians[permanent dead link]
  16. ^madhyamam."Kudumbam | Malayalam News | Madhyamam".madhyamam.com. Retrieved23 January 2021.
  17. ^Nirakkoottu 2010[permanent dead link]
  18. ^"IRS 2010 Q3 All Dailies in Kerala since IRS 2009 R2". Archived fromthe original on 15 December 2010. Retrieved20 December 2010.
  19. ^abIPSOS-STAT Survey 2009
  20. ^abMadhyamam A Muslim media success storyArchived 25 October 2012 at theWayback Machine. Rediff.com (12 March 2009).
  21. ^Madhyamam Thrissur edition launchedArchived 12 August 2017 at theWayback Machine. Samaylive.com (15 February 2010).
  22. ^Maha Governor launches Mumbai edition of daily 'Madhyamam', IBN Live News. Ibnlive.in.com (22 April 2011).
  23. ^Malayalam Newspapers eye Gulf as home markets slow down –. Zawya.com (10 May 2009).
  24. ^Okaz Organization ties up with Gulf MadhyamamArchived 26 June 2013 at theWayback Machine. Saudi Gazette (19 June 2013).
  25. ^"Santhwanam News Board". Archived fromthe original on 27 July 2011. Retrieved2 March 2010.
  26. ^TV channels storm arena in Kerala's political battle. Indian Express (2 May 2011).
  27. ^ADBI's 2005 awards honor excellence among developing Asia's print journalistsArchived 6 September 2008 at theWayback Machine
  28. ^"Forum mondial de l'Economie responsable Lille 2007-2010 / RSE". 10 August 2011. Archived fromthe original on 10 August 2011.
  29. ^Social Environmental Responsibility World Journalism Prize winners announced. Editorsweblog.org (24 October 2007).
  30. ^"Winners of the Tokyo Olympics print design competition – News Paper Design".newspaperdesign. Retrieved22 October 2021.
  31. ^(PUCL), People's Union for Civil Liberties."P.K. Prakash's acceptance speech".pucl.org. Archived fromthe original on 3 March 2016. Retrieved2 March 2010.
  32. ^Illegal Kidney trade in KeralaArchived 2 April 2010 at theWayback Machine. Frontlineonnet.com.
  33. ^British Medical Journal 2002;325:181 (27 July).BMJ.
  34. ^PUCL Bulletin, May 2004 P.K. Prakash, Citation:23rd PUCL Journalism for Human Rights AwardArchived 24 September 2015 at theWayback Machine. Pucl.org (23 March 2004).
  35. ^"Awards for scribes".The Hindu. (4 March 2004).
  36. ^The Hindu – National – PUCL award for journalists. Hinduonnet.com (5 March 2003).
  37. ^Statesman Awards for Rural Reporting announced. News.oneindia.in (16 September 2007).
  38. ^"Capturing myriad images of rural India"[dead link],The Statesman, Kolkata 16 September 2007.WEEKLY NEWS ROUND UP 88 (archive)Archived 8 March 2012 at theWayback MachineThe Times of India.
  39. ^Ramnath Goenka Excellence in Journalism Awards 2007–2008Archived 28 August 2010 at theWayback Machine
  40. ^Stories behind the story.The Indian Express. (19 April 2009).
  41. ^National media fellowship.The Hindu. (4 December 2006).
  42. ^Of those who wrote of the untold woes – The Statesman 17 September 2009[permanent dead link]
  43. ^Awards for media reports on Dalit issues The Hindu Kerala – Thiruvananthapuram Monday, Nov 12, 2007.The Hindu. (12 November 2007).
  44. ^Chandy calls for tackling hunger The Hindu 13 Nov 2004 Kerala – Thiruvananthapuram.The Hindu. (13 November 2004).
  45. ^Media awards The Hindu 10 Nov 2009.The Hindu. (10 November 2009).
  46. ^Kerala Interface, Department of Information & Public Relations, Government of Kerala, Volume 2 Number 5, April 2004Archived 23 April 2007 at theWayback Machine
  47. ^December 2010 18Archived 20 December 2010 at theWayback Machine
  48. ^"'Portraits in a Sea of Lies' bags Golden Crow Pheasant Award at IFFK".The Hindu. 17 December 2010.
  49. ^Award for 'Madhyamam' reporter. News.webindia123.com.
  50. ^Madhyamam bags theruvath raman award. News.oneindia.in (10 July 2008).
  51. ^"Prajesh Sen bags 'Theruvath Raman' award".
  52. ^Kerala -> Kochi -Award presented The Hindu. Tuesday, 1 May 2007[dead link]
  53. ^Journalism Award presented.The Hindu. (21 August 2009).
  54. ^Kerala – Kollam Award for journalist.The Hindu. (17 August 2007).
  55. ^"Home Page News & Features".The Hindu. 25 January 2013. Archived fromthe original on 25 January 2013.
  56. ^Engagements – Kochi.The Hindu. (1 June 2007).
  57. ^Kambissery award for Cherooppa.The Hindu.
  58. ^Statesman Award for MJ Babu of 'Madhyamam' daily in Kerala. Twocircles.net.
  59. ^MJ BABU reporter profile Thrissur Press ClubArchived 17 July 2011 at theWayback Machine
  60. ^News on e-mail snooping unfortunate: CMArchived 20 October 2013 at theWayback Machine. Mathrubhumi English (18 January 2012).
  61. ^"Book on Amma: Petition against media organizations, others".The Hindu. 5 March 2014. Retrieved5 March 2014.
  62. ^"Amritanandamayi mutt row: Gail Tredwell, five news organisations booked".India Today. 12 March 2014. Retrieved12 March 2014.
  63. ^"Some media gloryfying Taliban: Pinarayi Vijayan".The Statesman. 23 August 2021. Archived fromthe original on 18 September 2021. Retrieved20 May 2025.
  64. ^"മാധ്യമം' കേരള താലിബാന്റെ പത്രമോ?; ആവേശപുളകിതരായി ജമാഅത്തെ ഇസ്ലാമി" [Is “Madhyamam” the newspaper of Kerala Taliban?; Jamaat-e-Islami turns ecstatic].Deshabhimani. 1 September 2021. Archived fromthe original on 5 April 2023. Retrieved19 May 2025.
  65. ^ab"P.Vijayan vs State Of Kerala & Anr on 27 January 2010".indiankanoon.org.
  66. ^Malayala Manorama -Vichaaram->News->Malayalam->WebColumns->Kadhakkoottu – "Madakkathapaalile charithram"(History in the rejected mails) 18 March 2010. Manoramaonline.com.
  67. ^Manorama Online | Home | Kadhakkoottu. Week.manoramaonline.com.

External links

[edit]

Media related toMadhyamam Daily at Wikimedia Commons

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