Arab world's most prominent English newspaper closes down following legal dispute

The Beirut-based newspaper the Daily Star, the region's oldest English language daily, has stopped publishing after a Lebanese court declared it was bankrupt, Jamil Mroue, the paper’s owner told ZAWYA DOW JONES on Wednesday. Zawya reported that the Star was in a legal dispute with Standard Chartered Plc over a $1.7 million debt.

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Mroue said he is offering a 40 per cent stake in the paper in order to pay off the loan and turn around the bankruptcy ruling. The new stake would be taken from Mroue's existing 80 per cent ownership in the paper. Mroue has approached wealthy individuals and media groups in the region and is waiting for an offer.

Mroue blames the economic and political upheaval in Lebanon in the last few years as a cause for the paper’s debt, citing the drastic reduction in advertising sales as a clear indication of the economic downturn. Mroue told ZAWYA that he is appealing the court’s ruling, which he expects “any day now.”

Reporters at the paper told ZAWYA that Lebanese police shut down the newspaper's offices in the middle of the workday on Wednesday January 21. The paper has been temporarily shut down three times since it was founded in 1952.

Date Posted: 23 January 2009 Last Modified: 23 January 2009