Colombian newspapers loan paper to Venezuelan colleagues critical of government

(Photo; EFE)

Colombia’s Press Association is lending 52 tons of paper to three national Venezuelan newspapers on the verge of shutting down due to insufficient supplies to non state-owned dailies.

The shipment of paper arrived in the port of Cartagena on Friday, and reached Venezuela on Tuesday. Both Venezuelan and Colombian media have expressed the hope that once across the border, the paper will reach its intended destination without incident.

According to Colombian newspaper El Tiempo, the loan is part of the Andiarios’  “We are all Venezuela: no freedom of the press, no democracy” initiative.  In defense of freedom of the press and the right to information, 12 Colombian newspapers, including El Tiempo, published articles from the Venezuelan newspapers as an act of solidarity.

“There are no words in the dictionary sufficient to thank our Colombian brothers [at Andiarios]… when they saw that some  Venezuelan newspapers were at risk of shutting down, they at once extended their helping hand” expressed Carlos Eduardo Carmona, president of El Impulso.

“Every day the fate of the press in Venezuela is more uncertain. The government is not responding to requests for imports of paper. It’s as if you were talking to a wall,” said Carmona.

Carmona will meet with the state-created Maneiro Corporation on Thursday, which supplies paper to state presses, to see if the corporation will sell paper to El Impulso. The Corporation only accepts dollars.

According to NGO Public Spaces, 13 newspapers in Venezuela have already folded, and 17 more have been forced to downsize, with El National cutting its publication from 32 pages to 8 pages.

Political violence that has risen along with anti-government protests in Venezuela over the past few months have increased tensions between privately-owned media corporations and the administration of leftist President Nicolas Maduro. The Venezuelan government has accused some media of inciting unrest while the media accuses Maduro of limiting freedom of expression.

Sources

Related posts

US claims it financed Colombia’s purchase of Israeli spyware

Former presidents of Colombia’s congress formally accused of corruption

Former president maintains control over Colombia’s Liberal Party