Ekrem Dumanlı

Ekrem Dumanlı
Born1964 (age 61–62)
Yozgat, Turkey
Alma materIstanbul University
OccupationsJournalist, writer
Known forEditor in chief of daily Zaman

Ekrem Dumanlı (born 1964) is a Turkish newspaper executive. From 2001 until its closure by the government in 2016, he was the editor-in-chief of the newspaper Zaman, one of the most circulated newspapers in Turkey. He was also the chief executive officer of its English-language version, Today's Zaman.

Dumanlı graduated from the Department of Turkish Language and Literature at Istanbul University and worked for a time as a teacher of literature. He has also held a teaching position at Fatih University in Istanbul.

In 1993, he started working as a reporter for the Culture and Art Desk of Zaman. He was later assigned as Culture and Art Desk editor and publication coordinator. In 1997, Dumanlı went to the United States to further his studies in the media, completing his master's degree at Boston Emerson College. Returning to Turkey in 2001, Dumanlı was appointed editor-in-chief of Zaman.

His articles have also been published by the foreign press, including "The Turkey-U.S. Divide" by the Los Angeles Times. A play he wrote, titled The Last Trial, was performed on stage. Dumanlı is a member of Medya Derneği (Media Association), the World Association of Newspapers (WAN), the Türkiye Yazarlar Birliği (Turkish Writers Union), and the BJK Sports Club Congress.

Dumanlı was listed in Georgetown University's list of The 500 Most Influential Muslims in 2009. he is a known member of the Gulen Movement.