LONDON (AFP) -
Staff
at The Independent sent their final edition to the printing presses
before the 30-year-old British newspaper becomes available only in
digital format.
Journalists posted footage online of the team
"banging ourselves out" -- an old tradition of banging the desks to mark
the departure of a colleague.
The newspaper's final editorial
said history would be the judge of its "bold transition" to online
media, "as an example for other newspapers around the world to follow".
"Today the presses have stopped, the ink is dry and the paper will soon crinkle no more," it said.
"But as one chapter closes, another opens, and the spirit of The Independent will flourish still."
The
newspaper's Russian-born British owner, Evgeny Lebedev, who announced
the closure of the print edition last month, wrote that journalism had
"changed beyond recognition" and the newspaper "must change too".
The
Independent was set up by three former journalists in 1986 and became
known for its eye-catching, campaigning front pages and emphasis on
photos.
At the peak of its popularity , it had a circulation of more than 420,000, but this slumped to 40,000.
In
an editorial, The Guardian paid tribute to a "really rather wonderful
newspaper" that had suffered from dramatic changes to the advertising
market, notably the shift in revenues to sites such as Facebook.
"Great
newspapers which have survived for centuries find their business models
challenged as never before. So no one will celebrate the end of the
Independent in print," it said.
Like The Guardian, The Independent
was politically left of centre, and campaigned strongly against
Britain's involvement in the US-led war in Iraq in 2003.
Saturday's
final edition will include four special magazines looking back at its
history, before it becomes the first daily national to close in Britain
since 1995, when Today folded.
The weekly News of the World owned
by US media tycoon Rupert Murdoch closed in 2011 in the wake of a series
of phone hacking scandals, but was replaced by the Sun on Sunday, which
is owned by the same group.
ESI Media, which controls The
Independent, is also selling off the "i" -- a cut-price sister title
launched in 2010 -- to Scotland-based publisher Johnston Press.
The
sale price is estimated at £25 million (32 million euros, $36 million),
according to British media reports -- money which will be invested in
the website.
Independent.co.uk currently has nearly 70 million
monthly global unique users, while ESI Media has also launched a new
subscription app offering a 'virtual' print edition.
Some staff will move to the "i" but ESI Media warned there would be some redundancies.
Many reporters tried to stay upbeat on the final day.
"Vain scramble for final-edition bylines begins," regular contributor Simon Usborne tweeted earlier.
Parliamentary
sketch writer Tom Peck added: "The whiskey's out. Nothing would amuse
me more than a massive breaking news story right now."
© 2016 AFP
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