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Regional News Venezuela’s last anti-Maduro paper clings on as media intimidati­on grows

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CARACAS, (Reuters) Three hours before Venezuela’s El Nacional newspaper goes to print, a bare-bones staff of 20 journalist­s toils in its vast newsroom, surrounded by empty desks.

A poster on a wall warns employees not to steal toilet paper while another asks for medicine for a reporter’s mother, as the scarcity of basic goods that has forced over a million people to leave Venezuela also takes its toll on the country’s last independen­t national newspaper.

Printing the paper has become a daily struggle, its editors say. Currency controls imposed by the Venezuelan government are strangling imports, meaning newsprint, ink and printing equipment are scarce.

Now, however, El Nacional finds itself at a potentiall­y perilous juncture after President Nicolas Maduro’s top lieutenant successful­ly sued for defamation in a Venezuelan court.

Diosdado Cabello, head of Venezuela’s powerful Constituen­t Assembly, sued El Nacional in 2015 after it re-published an article from Spanish newspaper ABC reporting he was under investigat­ion by U.S. authoritie­s for drug traffickin­g.

Cabello has denied any involvemen­t in the drug trade. He says there is no proof against him and the accusation­s are aimed at tarnishing his reputation.

While pro-government newspapers like Ultimas Noticias operate freely in Venezuela, El Nacional often finds itself in the crosshairs of Maduro’s ruling Socialist party.

El Nacional’s independen­t reporting and headlines documentin­g power cuts, allegation­s of electoral fraud and strikes by desperate workers have prompted senior government leaders to regularly single out El Nacional’s coverage for public criticism.

Maduro’s supporters have assailed the paper as biased and accuse it of trying to precipitat­e his ouster. El Nacional denies this and says it accurately covers the current crisis.

The paper says the report it published in January 2015 was correct. In May, the U.S. Treasury sanctioned Cabello, freezing his assets and imposing a travel ban, and said in a statement he had organized drug shipments from Venezuela to Europe and shared the profits with Maduro, who is also under U.S. sanctions.

A suit brought by Cabello against the Wall Street Journal in 2015 for reporting his alleged links to drug traffickin­g was dismissed by U.S. courts. A spokeswoma­n for Dow Jones, which publishes the Journal, said the newspaper did not face any legal action in Venezuela related to that reporting.

In June, a tribunal in Caracas ordered El Nacional to pay Cabello the 1 billion bolivars he demanded in 2015 for libel for publishing the ABC story. Due to hyperinfla­tion, that is worth just $300 today but the court said it should be adjusted for price rises.

As the central bank has not published inflation data for three years, it is unclear how high the final award might be but according to Cabello it could potentiall­y amount to hundreds of millions of dollars.

“I swear to you I will make you pay,” Cabello said on his weekly state TV show in June, referring by name to El Nacional’s owner Miguel Henrique Otero, who recently emigrated to Spain.

Cabello showed a mocked-up front page of El Nacional entitled “The Wall Street Furrial”, named after his hometown of El Furrial, fuelling speculatio­n by pro-government legislator­s that he would seize the newspaper if it could not pay the fine.

Asked by Reuters about his plans, Cabello said his lawyer had asked the court to update the fine using the expected 2018 inflation rate the newspaper published in June of 300,000 percent - based on a calculatio­n by Venezuela’s opposition-controlled National Assembly.

“As El Nacional never lies, the figure should be what they put on their front page,” Cabello said, adding that inflation for the previous two years should also be taken into account.

The court said in its ruling it would assign an independen­t expert to calculate how to update the fine but did not say who that would be.

El Nacional’s lawyer Juan Garanton said the newspaper had appealed the ruling. The court’s decision makes no mention of what would happen if it is unable to pay but Garanton said Cabello would have no right to seize the paper.

Under Venezuelan commercial law, if a company does not pay a courtimpos­ed fine, the tribunal can seize its assets for auction.

“I don’t think he wants the paper...What he wants is to disrupt it,” Garanton said.

Otero, whose grandfathe­r founded the paper 75 years ago, declined to comment on the fine or the possibilit­y of a takeover.

In a phone interview from Madrid, he said advertisin­g on El Nacional’s foreign-hosted website was earning it valuable hard currency to keep the publicatio­n going.

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