Cyprus News Agency
Cyprus News Agency
About CNA

The Cyprus News Agency was officially established on February 16, 1976 at the initiative of the then Director General of the Cyprus Broadcasting Corporation (CyBC) Andreas Christofides, who saw the need for a national news agency for Cyprus.

Previously, a private news service under the same name had been set up by Miltiades Christodoulou, in 1957. On his appointment as director of the government Press and Information Office (PIO), he handed over to journalist Christakis Katsambas. The operation closed down in 1967.

With the official launching of CNA, Christofides appointed Andreas Hadjipapas, a journalist working for CyBC and correspondent for UPI and AFP in Cyprus, as chief editor of the Agency. Technical facilities were provided by the PIO, thus enabling Hadjipapas to dispatch a daily news bulletin in English to Reuters and the Non-Aligned News Agencies Pool.

In 1984, CNA expanded its activities, hired journalists and other staff and secured translation and distribution of its dispatches in other languages apart from English.

In 1989, the Cyprus House of Representatives approved legislation providing for the operation of the Cyprus News Agency as a "semi-governmental" news organisation with full editorial independence.

Under the Act, CNA is governed by a seven-member Board of Directors comprising established media professionals. The Board includes representatives of the Cyprus Journalists Union, the Cyprus Newspaper and Magazine Publishers Association, CyBC and the PIO.

In 1996, an important year in the development of CNA, news in Greek was introduced, to meet the needs of the local news media which were proliferating, especially in the electronic field and the CNA home page was created on the Internet.

A landmark in CNA's history is the signing in 1996 of a cooperation agreement with the Athens News Agency (ANA), which provided CNA its first computerised editing system.

At the same time, CNA sought membership in established media organisations and regional associations of news agencies. Thus, it became a member of the Alliance of Mediterranean News Agencies (AMAN), the European Alliance of Press Agencies (EAPA) and the Commonwealth Press Union (CPU).

In June 1998, CNA was elected President of the Alliance of the Mediterranean News Agencies (AMAN) at the Alliance's Seventh General Assembly, held in Limassol. During its tenure as President, CNA hosted in Nicosia, in cooperation with AFP, a technical seminar for the member-agencies of the Alliance (March 1999). In June 2000, CNA was unanimously elected at the Ninth General Assembly to the post of Secretary-General of AMAN, for a three-year period and was re-elected in 2003 and 2006.

In 2005, CNA joined the News Agencies World Council (NAWC). In the same year, CNA hosted the founding meeting of the Commonwealth Alliance of News Agencies (COMANA).

CNA currently has commercial agreements with Reuters, AFP, and ITAR-TASS, as well as cooperation agreements with ANA (Greece), SANA (Syria), XINHUA (China), ANSA (Italy), IRNA (Iran), APS (Algeria), ATA (Albania), ROMPRESS (Romania), PRENSA LATINA (Cuba), KYODO (Japan), TANJUG (Serbia), UKRINFORM (Ukraine), EFE (Spain), BTA (Bulgaria) and YONHAP (South Korea).

In 2002, CNA introduced news in Turkish, a press release service and its own photo service offering local coverage of news events.

In 2004, CNA introduced a special service to inform interested government services, private organisations and local administrations about programmes and other activities of the European Union.

In 2005, CNA launched, in cooperation with the Cyprus Telecommunications Authority (CYTA), a news service (WAP) watched through mobile telephones.



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