[go: nahoru, domu]

Jump to content

Kedaulatan Rakyat

From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
Kedaulatan Rakyat
Suara Hati Nurani Rakyat
(Voice of the People's Conscience)
Front page, 5 August 1955
TypeDaily newspaper
FormatBroadsheet
Owner(s)PT. BP Kedaulatan Rakyat
Founder(s)H. Samawi and M. Wonohito
Editor-in-chiefDr. Gun Nugroho Samawi
Managing editorMussahada, Drs Hudono SH, Joko Budhiarto
FoundedSeptember 27, 1945; 79 years ago (1945-09-27)
HeadquartersJl. P. Mangkubumi 40-42, Jetis, Yogyakarta
CityYogyakarta
CountryIndonesia
Sister newspapersKoran Merapi, Minggu Pagi
ISSN0852-6486
Websitewww.krjogja.com

Kedaulatan Rakyat (People's Sovereignty, abbreviated as KR) is a daily newspaper in Yogyakarta, Indonesia. The paper was founded by H. Soemadi and M. Wonohito. The newspaper was first published on September 27, 1945 and is still in print, making it the first newspaper published after Indonesian independence, as well as the oldest continuously published newspaper in Indonesia.

Initially, Kedaulatan Rakyat consisted of 16 pages. Recently, it has become the largest newspaper in Yogyakarta and southern Central Java, and at one time circulates 125,000 copies.[when?]

Its motto is Suara Hati Nurani Rakyat (Voice of the People's Conscience).

History

[edit]
A November 1945 "quick publication" of Kedaulatan Rakyat concerning the early days of national revolution

KR is the second newspaper to be published in Yogyakarta after the Javanese-language newspaper Sedya Tama, was published biweekly.[1] When Sedya Tama was banned by the Japanese, the Japanese army established a new newspaper called Sinar Matahari (Sunlight).[2]

Driven by the desire to publish an Indonesian-owned newspaper by the Indonesian government, after its independence H. Soemadi, M. Wonohito and Sinar Matahari staff members - who were mostly Indonesian - took over the paper and established a new daily called Kedaulatan Rakyat. The phrase Kedaulatan Rakyat is taken from the Preamble to the 1945 Constitution.

References

[edit]
  1. ^ Sedya tama, N.V. Mardi-Moeljo, 1924, retrieved 29 February 2024
  2. ^ Sinar Matahari, [s.n.], 1942, retrieved 29 February 2024
[edit]