DEREK ACHONG
Senior Reporter
A move to wind up the Newsday newspaper after 32 years of operation has been approved.
During a hearing a short while ago, High Court Judge Marissa Robertson approved an application made late last year by lawyers representing Daily News Ltd, the parent company of the newspaper.
In approving the application, Justice Robertson appointed chartered financial analyst Maria Daniel as liquidator.
Daniel will now take control of the company and assess and sell its assets in order to clear its debts to creditors.
During the hearing, attorney Gregory Pantin said there were no objections to the application after it was advertised in former rival newspapers and in the Gazette.
The petition was filed on December 31 last year, with the company citing financial issues caused by steadily declining advertising revenue and the impact of the COVID-19 pandemic.
The decision was only revealed by the company on January 9 this year, when it published the last physical edition of the newspaper, which was established in September 1993.
The newspaper has continued to publish digitally while the winding-up procedure was pending.
However, Daniel will now have to determine whether those operations will continue as she begins the liquidation process.
The company is also being represented by Miguel Vasquez of Hamel-Smith and Company.
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