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Banned newspapers

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The Epoch Times
American newspaper (founded 2000)
Limonka
central press
Today's Zaman
periodical literature
Sin Po
former Indonesian newspaper
Özgür Gündem
Turkish newspaper
Respublika
newspaper
Azadiya Welat
periodical literature
Al-Islah
Pakistani Urdu-language newspaper
Al-Hilal
weekly Urdu language newspaper
Münchener Post
periodical literature
Land og Folk
Danish newspaper
Ūkininkas
thumb|Cover page of the 6th issue of Ūkininkas (1891) Ūkininkas or Ukinįkas (literally: The Farmer) was a monthly Lithuanian-language newspaper published during the Lithuanian press ban by the editorial staff of Varpas from 1890 to 1905. Ūkininkas was printed in Tilsit (current Sovetsk) and Ragnit (current Neman) in German East Prussia and smuggled into Lithuania by the knygnešiai.
El Socialista
Spanish monthly political newspaper
Tasvîr-i Efkâr
newspaper in Ottoman Empire and Turkey (1862–1925)
Serbestî
Serbestî (Ottoman Turkish for "Liberty") was an Ottoman newspaper. It was founded in 1908 by Mevlanzade Rifat Bey, who in 1924 would become one of the 150 personae non gratae of the newly established Republic of Turkey, because the paper and its founder had an oppositional and hostile stance to the independence movement led by Mustafa Kemal.
Saima
newspaper published in 1844–1846 in Kuopio, Grand Duchy of Finland
Ayandegan
Ayandegan ( lit. "The Future People") was one of the most influential and popular daily newspapers in Iran during Mohammad Reza Pahlavi's rule. It was the first morning daily paper of Iran. It had an independent and critical stance. The paper was also a liberal and nationalist publication in the Pahlavi period.