The Asian Age

Govt to resign over blast fallout

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Beirut, Aug. 10: Lebanese Prime Minister Hassan Diab was expected to announce his government’s resignatio­n Monday amid popular outrage over the deadly Beirut port explosion that has reignited angry street protests.

The under-fire cabinet, struggling to weather the political storm, met amid widespread demands for an end to an entrenched political system widely seen as inept, corrupt and dominated by sectarian interests and family dynasties. During the session, “most of the ministers called on the government to step down”, Sport and

Youth Minister Vartine Ohanian said, saying she backed such calls.

Diab, who was set to address the nation on television at 1630 GMT, “is heading towards resignatio­n”, said another minister who asked not to be named after four of his colleagues had already stepped down.

According to the health ministry, at least 160 people were killed in Lebanon’s worst peacetime disaster, 6,000 were wounded and about 20 remained missing. Six days after the enormous chemical blast which wreaked destructio­n across swathes of the capital and was felt as far away as the island of Cyprus, residents and volunteers were still clearing the debris off the streets.

Internatio­nal rescue teams with sniffer dogs and specialise­d equipment remained at work at the disaster’s charred “ground zero”, where the search was now for bodies and not survivors.

The Lebanese want heads to roll over the tragedy and are asking how a massive stockpile of volatile ammonium nitrate, a compound used primarily as a fertiliser, was left unsecured at the port for years.

The country’s top officials have promised a swift and thorough investigat­ion — but they have stopped short of agreeing to an independen­t probe led by foreign experts as demanded by the protesters.

Four ministers had already decided they could no longer stand with a government that has shown little willingnes­s to take the blame or to put state resources at the service of the victims.

The contagion looked set to spread, leaving Diab, who only accepted the top job in December last year, no option but to follow suit and agree to a full cabinet resignatio­n.

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