Riad Taha

Riad Taha, (Arabic: رياض طه) (1927 – July 1980), was a Shia Lebanese journalist and president of the Lebanese Publishers Association (Arabic: نقابة الصحافة اللبنانية). He was assassinated when gunmen opened fire on his car. Perpetrators were never caught, but it was widely suspected that the assassination was ordered by the Syrian Intelligence.[1] He was the head of the Lebanese Publishers Association from 1967 until his murder.

Riad Taha
Born1927
DiedJuly 1980 (aged 5253)
Beirut, Lebanon
NationalityLebanese
OccupationJournalist and editor
Years active1945–1980

Early life

Taha was born into a Shiite family in Hermel, Lebanon, in 1927.[1][2]

Career

Taha started very young as a journalist in the magazine At Talaeh (Arabic: الطلائع) in 1945 when he was just 18. He also worked in the newspaper An Nidal wad Dunia (Arabic: النضال والدنيا).

In 1947, aged 20, he established the weekly Akhbar al 'Aalam (Arabic: أخبار العالم) (meaning the News of the World) and was in Palestine in 1948 to cover the war there. In 1949, he established in Lebanon the Orient News Agency (Arabic: وكالة أنباء الشرق), one of the first ever privately owned Arab news agencies.

In 1950, he started the publication Al Ahad magazine (Arabic: الأحد) (literally The Sunday) which was unique with pioneering effort in its content and its supplements. He was also editor of the magazine which opposed the Baghdad Pact.[3] Taha became an advocate of the Egyptian President Gamal Abdel Nasser during this period.[3] In 1953, he launched the newspaper Al Bilad (Arabic: البلاد) (meaning The Country).

In 1955, he founded the newspaper Al Kifah (Arabic: الكفاح) (literally The Struggle) and his own publishing house called Dar al Kifah (Arabic: دار الكفاح) that consolidated all his publishing activities. His also authored many books including:

  • 1950: Shafataan Bakheelataan (Arabic: شفتان بخيلتان)
  • 1958: Fi Tareeq al Kifah (Arabic: في طريق الكفاح)
  • 1963: Filisteen al Yawm, La Ghadan (Arabic: فلسطين اليوم، لا غداً)
  • 1973: Al I'laam wal Ma'raka (Arabic: الإعلام والمعركة)
  • 1974: Qissat al Wahda wal Infisal (Arabic: قصة الوحدة والإنفصال)

He was elected head of the Lebanese Publishers Association, a post he would hold continuously until his assassination in 1980.[4]

Assassination

Taha was killed in Beirut in July 1980.[5] Although there have been rumors that Syrian intelligence killed him, there is also another report, stating that Taha was killed due to the feud between his family and another Shiite family.[5]

gollark: Anyway, if it was me making this electoral system, it would be stupidly overdone, have a shiny web UI, and full transparency logs, but be made about 5 days late with code nobody can ever understand, and probably randomly crash.
gollark: Look, don't make excuses, *vote rationally*.
gollark: I'm sure you know anyway.
gollark: The constituency system unfairly biases against some people, but we didn't copy that.
gollark: It's effectively two-party.

See also

  • List of assassinated Lebanese people

References

  1. Al Mustakbal: الاستخبارات - سورية في دائرة الاتهام منذ اغتيال المتني حتى تويني (in Arabic)
  2. Knudsen, Are (2010). "Acquiescence to Assassinations in Post-Civil War Lebanon?". Mediterranean Politics. 15 (1): 1–23. doi:10.1080/13629391003644611.
  3. Nasser Kalawoun (2 September 2000). The Struggle For Lebanon: A Modern History of Lebanese-Egyptian Relations. I.B.Tauris. p. 37. ISBN 978-1-86064-423-8. Retrieved 24 September 2013.
  4. Nisan, Mordechai (1999). "Christian Decline and Models of Lebanon" (PDF). ACPR. 83. Retrieved 17 March 2013.
  5. "Feuds rampant in Lebanon". The Spokesman Review. Beirut. AP. 16 September 1982. Retrieved 23 March 2013.
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