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Mongolia media guide

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Supporters holding newspapers as they pose for a selfie during a campaign event for the Mongolian People's Party in Ulaanbaatar, June 2020Image source, Getty Images

Television is the most popular media, accounting for at least 60% of the market. Mongolian National Broadcaster, the only public service media group, is one of the most watched and listened to media in the country.

Press freedom is generally respected, says the US-based NGO Freedom House, but media ownership is opaque and many journalists self-censor to avoid offending political or business interests.

Reporters Without Borders says that more than half of all the defamation cases in Mongolia are brought against journalists and media.

Despite a high level of literacy, newspaper circulations tend to be small. Some titles are published by political parties.

麻豆官网首页入口 World Service broadcasts on 103.1 FM in Ulan Bator.

There were three million internet users by July 2022, comprising 89% of the population (Worldintnetstats.com). There are no official restrictions on web access.

Press

  • - private daily

  • - private daily, the country's biggest

  • - private daily

  • -Mongolian People's Revolutionary Party daily, the country's oldest newspaper, founded in 1920

  • - English-language weekly

Television

  • - national, public broadcaster

  • - private

  • - owned by Ulaanbaatar city government

  • - private

  • - private

  • - private

Radio

  • - public, sole national broadcaster

News agency

  • - state-owned, English-language pages