Thai Rath

ไทยรัฐ
Thai Rath
Type Daily newspaper
Format Broadsheet
Founder(s) Kampol Wacharapol
Founded December 25, 1962
Language Thai
Headquarters Bangkok,  Thailand
Circulation 1,000,000
Website Thai Rath
Thai Rath front page, 1 Mar 2012, headlining:
• The King and Queen of Thailand received the Duke of York;
Worachet Phakhirat, associate professor of the Faculty of Law, Thammasat University, was attacked inside the faculty by two men disagreeing with Phakhirat's proposal to amend the Criminal Code, section 112, or the lese majeste law;
• The For Thais Party is to amend the constitution by dissolving the administrative courts and other independent agencies, including the election commission;
• Lana O'Connell, Australian swimsuit model, died in a crash, failing to wear a helmet.

Thai Rath (Thai: ไทยรัฐ, lit. Thai State or Thai Nation) is a daily newspaper in Thai published in Bangkok and distributed nationwide. The paper is a broadsheet published with two sections. The first section is devoted to news. Although the news section is best known for its sensationalist coverage of crime and accidents, it also includes stories on Thai politics, economy, and society. The second section features coverage of sport and entertainment. Thai Rath is the oldest newspaper in the native language (Bangkok Post, the English-language daily, is the oldest published newspaper in the country with a history of more than 60 years) and is the best-selling newspaper in Thailand, claiming a circulation in excess of 1 million copies daily.[1]

History

Thai Rath was founded on 25 December 1962 by Kampol Wacharapol. Kampol had started two other newspapers, Khaopap Raiwan (Thai: ข่าวภาพรายวัน, lit. The Weekly Pictorial), which was published between 1950 and 1958, when the newspaper was shut down by the government. Following the shutdown of the newspaper the government did not permit any new newspapers, so he "rented" the Siang Ang Thong (Thai: เสียงอ่างทอง, lit. Ang Thong Voice) newspaper name[2] from Mr Laor Ketkaew, and the newspaper was published between 1 May 1959 and 24 December 1962.

Thai Rath has been the largest-selling Thai newspaper for decades.

Controversy

Thai Rath published a photo of the body of David Carradine.[3][4] You can see a copy of the newspaper front page with the photo here:[5]

References

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