The Asian Age

Guerrilla newspaper spools last print edition

Venezuelan paper won’t give up without a fight, goes digital

-

Caracas, Venezuela, Nov. 3: A scrappy, independen­t newspaper in Venezuela that never shied from fights with the country’s powerful socialist leaders circulated its last print edition on Thursday, but its staff of reporters and editors aren’t declaring defeat.

Launched in 2000 by a former leftist guerrilla fighter, Tal Cual will continue to tell stories of the country’s tumultuous times as an internet-only publicatio­n.

It’s 26-year-old editor, Luisa Quintero, said she views the changing platform as a reinventio­n’ “not a step backward. “This country doesn’t give us time to mourn,” Quintero said. “We won’t have paper, but we’re going to keep working.” Newspapers around the world have faltered in recent years under economic stress and declining advertisin­g revenue.

The problem is compounded in Venezuela, a country beset by tripledigi­t inflation. The newspaper said its move to a digital format is driven by the scarcity of newsprint controlled by the Venezuelan government and the astronomic­al cost of importing paper on its shoestring budget.

Founding editor Teodor Petkoff is a former guerrilla fighter who later entered the government as the country’s planning minister and ran for President. He launched Tal Cual by calling out political rival and charismati­c former President Hugo Chavez with a front page headline: “Hola, Hugo.” At its height, Tal Cual circulated just 15,000 copies throughout the country, but it packed a punch.

The newspaper’s edgy stories and cutting opinion pieces over the years have drawn blowback from the government, including a defamation lawsuit filed by Diosdado Cabello, then president of the National Assembly, which was later dropped.

 ?? — AP ?? Gloria Villamizar, left, and Luisa Quintero journalist of newspaper TalCual speak during an interview in Caracas, Venezuela, on Thursday.
— AP Gloria Villamizar, left, and Luisa Quintero journalist of newspaper TalCual speak during an interview in Caracas, Venezuela, on Thursday.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from India