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At first glance, tiny Luxembourg's population appears spoilt for newspaper choice. A country with a population of a medium-sized city (460,000) wakes up to eight nationally distributed dailies.
On the evening of 3 December, the day after parliamentary elections, all three of Russia's largest television channels began their news programmes with the same four-minute clip of a self-congratulatory speech by Vladimir Putin at a factory outside Moscow.
There cannot be a politician left in Belgium who has not been given an opportunity by the country's media to air his or her point of view about what now stands as the longest political crisis in the country's history.
Despite his stunning election win this July, Turkey's Prime Minister Recep Tayyip Erdogan remains a prickly character when it comes to media criticism.
The death of the newspaper has been predicted often enough. The advent of radio, then television, was supposed to kill it off. It did not happen. Today, it is the internet that is predicted to make newspapers obsolete. The Swiss are doing a test run by treating the daily newspaper as a carrier of advertising and giving it away for free in order to reach as many people as possible – precisely what content-providers on the internet are doing.