By Reuters
The headquarters of Media 24, owned by intenet,
entertainment and media group Naspers, in Cape Town, South Africa, May
11, 2015. [REUTERS]
South African media and e-commerce group Naspers plans to lay off more
than 500 employees and close a number of
newspapers and magazines,
including leading weekly tabloid the Sunday Sun, its print division
Media24 said on Tuesday.
“For many of our print titles the benefits of prior interventions to
offset the structural declines and keep them on the shelf no longer
exist and they’ve run out of options in this regard,” Media24 CEO Ishmet
Davidson said in a statement.
Media24 is Africa’s largest publisher, printer, and distributor of
magazines and books, and is also the continent’s largest newspaper
publisher with around 3,000 employees across eight divisions.
The company said it would shut down one other national paper, four
community newspapers, and four national magazines while outsourcing the
majority of its monthlies and halving the frequency.
Its 70-year-old Drum Magazine, one of Africa’s first Black lifestyle publications, will move online.
The layoffs and closures come in the wake of planned job cuts at public
broadcaster the South African Broadcasting Corporation (SABC), and
similar moves at other members of the country’s “big four” print
publishers - Arena Holdings, Caxton and Independent News.
Since the pandemic hit in mid-March followed by a national lockdown,
print publications have taken a hit of between 40% and 100% to
advertising and sales revenue, forcing many to migrate online where they
earn a fraction of their former ad sales.
The South African National Editors Forum said in June around 50,000
people employed in the printing sector could be affected by newspaper
closures. National unemployment is at a record 30.1 per cent.
“The writing’s been on the wall for the global print media industry for
years,” said Dinesh Balliah, media studies lecturer at Wits University,
adding that more closures locally would follow with newspapers
struggling to monetise online content.
“South Africa has managed to buck the trend for a while given its high
data costs, which made good quality news sites difficult to access while
newspapers remained relatively cost-effective. It really isn’t looking
good.”
In Britain, Daily Mirror owner Reach RCH.L on Tuesday announced it would
cut about 550 jobs, or 12 per cent of its workforce, after the COVID-19
pandemic hit circulation and advertising at its national and regional
newspapers.
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