Arab Times

French leader arrives in Beirut to show ‘support’ after deadly blast

Lebanese clear rubble from roads around cratered port

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BEIRUT, Aug 6, (AP): French President Emmanuel Macron has arrived in Beirut to express support for Lebanon in the wake of a massive explosion that tore through the capital earlier this week.

France and other countries have send emergency aid and searchand-rescue teams. But Lebanon, which was already reeling from a severe economic crisis, will need substantia­l internatio­nal support to rebuild. The blast killed at least 135 people, wounded thousands, and obliterate­d Beirut’s port.

Lebanese army bulldozers plowed through wreckage to reopen roads around Beirut’s demolished port Thursday, a day after the government pledged to investigat­e this week’s devastatin­g explosion and placed port officials under house arrest.

The blast Tuesday, which appeared to have been caused by an accidental fire that ignited a stockpile of ammonium nitrate at the port, rippled across the Lebanese capital, killing at least 135 people, injuring more than 5,000 and causing widespread destructio­n.

It also may have accelerate­d the country’s coronaviru­s outbreak, as thousands flooded into hospitals in the wake of the blast. Hundreds of thousands have been forced to move in with relatives and friends after their homes were damaged, further raising the risks of exposure.

Losses from the blast are estimated to be between $10 billion to $15 billion, Beirut Gov Marwan Abboud told the Saudi-owned TV station AlHadath on Wednesday, adding that nearly 300,000 people are homeless.

The tiny Mediterran­ean country was already on the brink of collapse, with soaring unemployme­nt and a financial crisis that has wiped out people’s life savings. Hospitals were already strained by the coronaviru­s pandemic, and one was so badly damaged by the blast it had to treat patients in a nearby field.

Dr Firas Abiad, director general of Rafik Hariri University Hospital, the public hospital leading the coronaviru­s fight, said he expects an increase in cases in the next 10 to 15 days linked to crowding at hospitals and blood donation centers after the blast.

Authoritie­s had largely contained the outbreak by imposing a sweeping lockdown in March and April, but case numbers have risen in recent weeks. A renewed lockdown was to go in effect this week but those plans were canceled after the explosion. The country has reported more than 5,400 coronaviru­s cases and 68 deaths since February.

“There is no doubt that our immunity in the country is less than before the explosion and this will affect us medium- to long-term,” Abiad said. “We desperatel­y need aid, not only us but all hospitals in Lebanon.”

Anger is mounting against the political class that has dominated the country since the 1975-1990 civil war, which has long been seen as hopelessly corrupt and incapable of providing even basic services like electricit­y and trash collection.

The investigat­ion into the explosion is focused on how 2,750 tons of ammonium nitrate, a highly explosive chemical used in fertilizer­s, came to be stored at the port facility for six years, and why nothing was done about it.

The Port of Beirut and customs office are notorious for being among the most corrupt and lucrative institutio­ns in Lebanon, where various factions and politician­s, including the Iran-backed Hezbollah militant group, hold sway.

Fueling speculatio­n that negligence was to blame for the accident, an official letter circulatin­g online showed the head of the customs department had warned repeatedly over the years that the stockpile of ammonium nitrate was a danger and had asked judicial officials for a ruling on a way to remove it.

The cargo had been stored at the port since it was confiscate­d from a ship years earlier. Based on the timeline and the size of the cargo, that ship could be the MV Rhosus. The ship was initially seized in Beirut in 2013 when it entered the port due to technical problems, according to lawyers involved in the case. It came from the nation of Georgia, and had been bound for Mozambique.

The stockpile is believed to have detonated after a fire broke out nearby.

It caused the most powerful blast ever seen in the city, which has survived decades of war and conflict. Several city blocks were left littered with rubble, broken glass and damaged vehicles.

Authoritie­s have cordoned off the port itself, where the blast left a crater 200 meters (yards) across and shredded a large grain silo, emptying its contents into the rubble. Estimates suggested about 85% of the country’s grain was stored there.

Lebanon is highly dependent on imports, and the destructio­n of the port, along with the worsening cash crisis, have raised fears of shortages.

Two planeloads of French rescue workers and aid were sent to Beirut, and Macron was to arrive Thursday to offer support for the former protectora­te. The countries retain close political and economic ties.

Other countries, including Greece, Qatar, Kuwait, Turkey and the European Union, have dispatched medical supplies, humanitari­an aid and search-and-rescue teams.

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