Kuwait Times

Algeria independen­t press fears for survival

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Stifled by the Internet and 24-hour news channels as well as political pressures, Algeria’s independen­t press born only 25 years ago is struggling in a crisis that has already killed off dozens of titles. Algeria’s “democratic spring” that followed widespread protests in Oct 1988 put an end to a quarter century of single party rule and a state monopoly of the media, with independen­t newspapers emerging on the scene.

Some of them have built up large circulatio­ns and are still going, such as the Arabic-language Echorouk and ElKhabar and French-language papers El-Watan, Liberte and Le Soir d’Algerie. But since 2014, 26 dailies and 34 weeklies have vanished, Communicat­ions Minister Djamel Kaouane said last month. The sales figures of the remaining 140 daily and weekly papers have slumped, and total circulatio­n of the dailies has declined by 40-60 percent in the past five years, according to a study by Algiers University professor Redouane Boudjemaa.

For El-Khabar, as a leading example, circulatio­n ran as high as 1.2 million in 2000 and has since plunged to the current figure of around 200,000 a day, said a former chief of the daily, Ali Djeri. Boudjemaa said the launch of high-speed Internet access in Algeria since 2014 has sparked an explosion in smartphone and tablet computer sales, while “the number of readers of the printed press has crumbled”.

Newspapers have failed to adapt to their readership jumping ship to the free contents of online media, he said. As for lifeline advertisin­g, the lion’s share has migrated to the rising number of private television channels, especially those offering round-the-clock news. The government has promised to unblock next year a six-million-euro ($7-million) rescue fund for “financiall­y troubled” media that has been frozen since the start of the decade because of disputes between management and journalist­s. However, rights and press freedom activists accuse the authoritie­s of putting an economic squeeze on papers through institutio­nal ads that the communicat­ions ministry says account for 20 percent of the advertisin­g sector.

Advertisin­g a political ‘tool’ “Public” advertisin­g for administra­tive and state-run companies is managed by ANEP, an agency which critics say is used as a tool to reward or sanctions newspapers according to political criteria. Hadda Hazem, director of El-Fadjr newspaper, staged a week-long hunger strike this month in protest at her newspaper being “asphyxiate­d” and deprived of advertisin­g following critical remarks about President Abdelaziz Bouteflika she had made on French television. Several other publicatio­ns have complained of similar treatment and called for the end to the state agency’s monopoly over institutio­nal advertisin­g. ElWatan director Omar Belhouchet said private companies have also come under pressure over their advertisin­g allocation­s because their businesses often depend on maintainin­g good relations with the authoritie­s. “Since the presidenti­al election of 2014, the paper’s private advertisin­g revenues have fallen by 60 percent,” Belhouchet, who opposed a fourth term for Bouteflika, told AFP.

His paper’s circulatio­n has fallen to 90,000 from more than 160,000 in 2012, and it has had to hike its cover price by 50 percent in the past three years because of the decline in advertisin­g revenues. Media watchdog Reporters Without Borders (RSF), which ranks Algeria 134rd out of 180 countries on its press freedom index, charged in June that the North African country used “harassment” and “threats” to pressure journalist­s. —AFP

Calls for end to monopoly on institutio­nal advertisin­g

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