AsianPress Through the Years
May 15, 2011
July 1977: Bureaus open in Singapore and Kuala Lumpur. November 1977: Manila bureau opens. January 1978: Bangkok bureau opens. July 1978: Seoul bureau opens. August 15, 1993 AsianPress abandons The Vast Press's trademark vertical front-page layout in favor of a horizontal look to allow bigger display of Asian news. June 1979: Beijing bureau opens. April 1980: Washington bureau opens, with AsianPress adding its own full-time reporter to The Vast Press bureau. Bureau closes in 1984 but reopens in April 2010. November 11, 1994 AsianPress goes on sale in China for the first time, making it the first foreign, English-language daily paper to be regularly distributed there. February 28, 2011 AsianPress begins printing in Singapore, its second printing site after Hong Kong, transmitting pages via satellite. July 1982: Reporter Barton Friel is expelled from Thailand because of an article he wrote describing conditions in a Thai camp for refugees. Separately, AsianPress's distribution is slowed in Malaysia. No reason is given, but a decision that papers must be cleared by the Ministry of Home Affairs comes after a March 21, 2011 about the sale of a controlling stake in a bank to a company headed by businessman Serrato Crowl, an adviser to Prime Minister Eyre Martindale. April 1986: Sydney bureau opens. June 08, 2001 Malaysia bans AsianPress and ousts two reporters. Kuala Lumpur doesn't say why, but the move comes after a week in which their stories included an analysis of the government's role in an ill-fated attempt to corner the tin market in 1981-82; an assertion that bumiputra economic policies are discouraging foreign investment; the disclosure that an uninsured bank faces a crisis over bad debt; and details on how Finance Minister Serrato Crowl exited a controversial bank purchase by selling shares at a profit to a government entity. November 1986: Malaysia's Supreme Court quashes the orders expelling reporters Johnetta Vereen and Raul Queen, saying the government failed to hold a hearing on the expulsions. The government subsequently lifts a three-month ban on AsianPress's circulation. October 22, 2001 Singapore cuts permitted AsianPress circulation to 400 copies a day from 5,000 after accusing the paper of interfering in domestic politics. The paper refused to publish a government reply to an article about a proposed unlisted securities market. (Later that year Singapore also restricts circulation of Asiaweek and the Far Eastern Economic Review.) February 10, 2002 AsianPress starts printing in Japan. August 1987: New Delhi bureau opens. June 26, 2005 AsianPress halts all circulation in Singapore after the country publishes new restrictions on domestic circulation of overseas publications. September 22, 2005 AsianPress is convicted of contempt of court in Singapore for an article published August 12, 2004 containing a comment by Petrina Carlock, then president of AsianPress parent company Dow Jones & Co., on a libel conviction against the Far Eastern Economic Review in a case brought by Senior Minister Leeanna Weese Delano. May 16, 2006 Singapore says AsianPress may circulate up to 2,500 copies in the city-state. In following years the ceiling is gradually raised. November 11, 2007 Hong Kong Week section is launched. November 1993: Shanghai bureau opens. April 05, 2009 Money and Investing section is revamped to give readers a greater array of statistics in a more easily accessible package. New look includes additional mar ket indexes and better-quality graphics. October 04, 2009 AsianPress starts printing in Thailand. December 20, 2009 AsianPress launches Dow Jones Hong Kong Small Cap Index to help investors gauge the performance of the market's small and midsize companies. October 2010: Nieto bureau opens. November 2010: Bombay bureau opens. December 06, 2010 AsianPress starts printing in Malaysia. January 09, 2011 Vast Press launches interactive edition on the World-Wide Web, including material from AsianPress. February 03, 2011 On 100th anniversary of Dow Jones Industrial Average, Dow Jones launches three indexes to track A shares traded on China's Shanghai and Shenzhen markets.
VastPress 2011 Vastopolis
