La Nouvelle Tribune

Morocco · Outlet profile
La Nouvelle Tribune
French-language weekly and digital news platform
Captured Private (CaPr) Maintained 2022–2026
Publisher
Impression Presse Edition (IPE SA), privately held
Founded
November 1995; first issue 18 January 1996
Ownership
Founding Yata / Dassouli family (majority) via IPE SA; Akwa Group ~8% minority (2006), controlled by Aziz Akhannouch
Leadership
Afifa Dassouli, president of the directoire, since the death of founder Fahd Yata (11 December 2021)
Digital
LNT.ma (launched November 2011); news, opinion, video, membership
Funding
Private commercial revenue (advertising, sales, subscriptions); no current audited figures identified
Editorial posture
Establishment-aligned; cautious on monarchy, security and Western Sahara; no editorial-autonomy safeguard
RSF 2026 (country)
Morocco 105th of 180, score 50.55 (▲ 15 from 120th)
Mapped as a standalone CaPr outlet for 2026 following decomposition of the former royal-house-linked cluster. RSF figure is country-level (RSF scores countries, not outlets).
Morocco · La Nouvelle Tribune
Typology trajectory
2022
CaPr
2023
CaPr
2024
CaPr
2025
CaPr
2026
CaPr
La Nouvelle Tribune has been classified Captured Private (CaPr) across all five cycles. The classification rests on private family ownership (Yata / Dassouli via Impression Presse Edition), an establishment-linked minority stake, financial fragility within an establishment-sustained press segment, and consistent editorial caution toward the monarchy and political establishment, with no safeguard for editorial autonomy. The 2026 change is structural rather than typological: following decomposition of the former royal-house-linked cluster (whose broadcast assets moved to SNRT and were reclassified SC), La Nouvelle Tribune is now mapped as a standalone CaPr outlet.

La Nouvelle Tribune is a French-language weekly newspaper and digital news platform, founded in November 1995 by the journalist Fahd Yata and first published on 18 January 1996. It is edited by Impression Presse Edition (IPE SA), a privately held Moroccan company, and maintains an active digital presence through its LNT.ma portal, launched in November 2011. The outlet has historically positioned itself around economic and business coverage, with a generalist weekly edition.

This profile was previously carried within a broader “royal-house-linked media” cluster. For the 2026 cycle, that cluster has been decomposed: its former broadcast assets (Medi1 TV and Medi1 Radio) and the minority interest in SOREAD-2M have moved into the SNRT-led public-audiovisual consolidation and are now mapped as State-Controlled (SC) under SNRT, while EcoMedias is no longer carried as a royal-linked holding following its acquisition by a majority owner unconnected to the palace. La Nouvelle Tribune is therefore mapped as a standalone CaPr outlet.


Media assets

Publishing and digital: La Nouvelle Tribune (French-language weekly) and the LNT.ma digital news platform, which carries daily news, opinion, video and membership features.


Ownership and governance

La Nouvelle Tribune is published by Impression Presse Edition (IPE SA), a privately held company structured as a société anonyme with a directoire and supervisory board. The newspaper was founded and controlled by Fahd Yata, son of the late communist leader and Parti du progrès et du socialisme figure Ali Yata, together with his wife and co-founder Afifa Dassouli. Media-ownership research, including the Media Ownership Monitor Morocco, has documented the founding family as the dominant shareholders, with Yata and Dassouli each holding substantial individual stakes and Yata retaining majority influence and operational control until his death.

Fahd Yata died on 11 December 2021. Afifa Dassouli, the co-founder and the company’s administrative and financial director, presides over the directoire and carries the editorial and managerial continuity of the title.

The principal documented outside stake is the roughly 8 percent acquired in 2006 by the Akwa Group, the conglomerate controlled by the businessman Aziz Akhannouch, who later became Morocco’s head of government. That stake, entering through Akwa’s Groupe Caracteres, marked the main change in the title’s capital structure while the founding family retained majority control. La Nouvelle Tribune’s establishment alignment therefore runs less through royal-house ownership than through this proximity to a senior governing figure and the broader political economy of Morocco’s francophone press, in which ownership and influence are concentrated among a small circle of economic and political actors.


Source of funding and budget

La Nouvelle Tribune is a privately owned commercial publication that relies on advertising, sales, subscriptions and digital revenue rather than on a state budget line. As with much of the Moroccan francophone press, its declared circulation is modest and its commercial base is narrow. Media-ownership researchers note a recurring feature of this segment of the Moroccan press economy: several low-margin or loss-making titles are sustained by investors linked to major economic and political centres, for whom the value of the holding lies partly in influence and standing rather than in commercial return. The survival of such outlets is therefore tied not only to ordinary commercial performance but also to their affiliation with centres of economic and political power, which is itself a marker of capture. SMM has not identified audited, current financial figures for the title.


Editorial independence

La Nouvelle Tribune practises the editorial caution characteristic of Morocco’s establishment-aligned francophone press. It avoids critical scrutiny of the monarchy, the security establishment and sensitive matters such as Western Sahara, and its political coverage tends toward a measured, “smooth” register that links domestic affairs to economic outcomes rather than challenging core institutions. This caution reflects ownership ties, financial dependence and the wider political economy of Moroccan media rather than any publicly documented formal editorial directive. No statutory safeguard or independent oversight mechanism protects the title’s editorial autonomy from owner influence or political pressure.


AI and digital policy

SMM found no evidence that La Nouvelle Tribune has published a dedicated public AI governance or editorial-use policy as of mid-2026. The outlet operates an active digital platform, LNT.ma, carrying news, opinion, video and membership features, but it has disclosed no framework governing the use of AI in editorial production, verification, attribution, recommendation systems, audience analytics, synthetic-media labelling, content disclosure, bias mitigation or human editorial oversight.


Classification rationale

La Nouvelle Tribune is classified as Captured Private (CaPr), a classification maintained from prior SMM cycles and unchanged for 2026. The title is privately owned and commercially structured, so it is not State-Controlled. However, its ownership ties (the founding family’s control alongside a minority stake held by a conglomerate controlled by a senior governing figure), its financial fragility within an establishment-sustained press segment, and its consistent editorial caution toward the monarchy and the political establishment align it with centres of power rather than leaving it editorially independent, and it operates with no safeguard for editorial autonomy. This combination of private ownership and establishment-aligned capture is what the CaPr category describes. The principal 2026 change is structural rather than typological: La Nouvelle Tribune is now mapped as a standalone CaPr outlet following the decomposition of the former royal-house-linked cluster, whose broadcast assets moved into SNRT’s State-Controlled perimeter and whose other former components are no longer carried as royal-linked holdings.

June 2026

Citation (cite the article/profile as part of):
Dragomir, M. (2025). State Media Monitor Global Dataset 2025. Media and Journalism Research Center (MJRC). Zenodo. https://doi.org/10.5281/zenodo.17219015

This article/profile is part of the State Media Monitor Global Dataset 2025, a continuously updated dataset published by the Media and Journalism Research Center (MJRC).