Traditional Culture Encyclopedia - Travel guide - What are the minority language newspapers and periodicals in China?

What are the minority language newspapers and periodicals in China?

There are Mongolian, Tibetan, Uygur, Kazak, Korean, Jingpo, Yi, Zawa, Kirgiz, Xibe, Naxi, Zhuang, (Dehong Dai), (Xishuangbanna Dai), Lisu, old and new, etc. More than half of these newspapers are concentrated in Inner Mongolia and Xinjiang Autonomous Region, and the rest are distributed in Tibet, Sichuan, Yunnan, Qinghai, Gansu, Liaoning, Jilin, Heilongjiang and other provinces. Most of them are local party committees of the Chinese production party in areas where ethnic minorities live in concentrated communities. There are less than 10 minority newspapers in each province, among which Inner Mongolia Daily, Tibet Daily and Xinjiang Daily have great influence. There are a large number of minority language newspapers at the regional and state levels, which are found in almost every region and state in Xinjiang and Inner Mongolia Autonomous Region. The number of minority newspapers at county level is small. Xibe-language Chabuchar Newspaper and Naxi-language Lijiang Newspaper are county-level newspapers and the only newspapers in China that use these two national languages. Most minority language newspapers are small newspapers with version 4 1, and only a few are face-to-face newspapers. Newspapers are published at different times.

In their propaganda and reporting, ethnic minority newspapers and periodicals attach great importance to combining socialist content with ethnic forms, linking with local conditions, publicizing Marxism-Leninism, Mao Zedong Thought, socialism and patriotism, and publicizing the principles and policies of the Communist Party of China (CPC) and the people's government on ethnic issues. Adhere to the socialist policy of running a newspaper, take the road of self-editing, and report people and events in the region in a prominent position and in a large space in a form that is popular with ethnic minorities, so as to enhance the national and local characteristics of the newspaper.