BFF-34 Hariri newspaper drops off Lebanese stands

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BFF-34

LEBANON-MEDIA-MUSTAQBAL

Hariri newspaper drops off Lebanese stands

BEIRUT, Jan 31, 2019 (BSS/AFP) – Lebanese newspaper Al-Mustaqbal issued its
last print version after 20 years on Thursday, it said, the latest victim of
the country’s media crisis.

Established by late billionaire premier Rafik Hariri, Al-Mustaqbal is
affiliated to his son Prime Minister Saad Hariri’s Future Current party.

“Al-Mustaqbal folds up its last pages today,” said an editorial on the
front page of the newspaper, whose name means “Future” in Arabic.

“On February 14, 2019, it relaunches digitally.”

For two decades, Al-Mustaqbal recorded key events of the multi-
confessional country’s history, including the 2005 assassination of its
founder in a bombing.

In the years after the Sunni Muslim politician’s killing, the newspaper
became a platform for the Future Current party launched in 2007, as it faced
rivals including the Shiite movement Hezbollah.

On Thursday, Al-Mustaqbal editor-in-chief Hani Hammoud wrote that his
newspaper was struggling to adapt to the digital era.

“In 20 years, a generation of readers has turned into consumers who feel
that 120 characters… is enough for them to know,” he wrote.

“The daily battle of editors at Al-Mustaqbal… has become to find a
headline that doesn’t make the reader feel like they already saw it the
previous night on their smartphone.”

The newspaper suffered a financial crisis in 2015, prompting the dismissal
of employees and a delay in payment of salaries, media watchdog Reporters
Without Borders says.

Al-Mustaqbal is only the latest in a string of Lebanese newspapers to call
it quits.

In September, political daily Al-Anwar disappeared from print after nearly
60 years due to “financial losses”.

In June, prestigious pan-Arab newspaper Al-Hayat closed its Lebanon
offices, where it was first founded in 1946 before later becoming Saudi
owned.

Its printing presses in Beirut stopped the same month, leaving its
international version only available online.

In late 2016, Lebanese newspaper As-Safir closed 42 years after publishing
its first edition, with the founder saying it had run out of funds.

Lebanon has weathered a series of political crises since civil war broke
out in neighbouring Syria in 2011, and the prime minister has for eight
months failed to get all political parties to agree on a new cabinet.

BSS/AFP/SSS/1602 hrs