Oman Daily Observer

Lebanon’s Diab urges donors to ‘save’ crisis-hit country

-

Linking aid to Lebanon with government formation has started to threaten the lives of Lebanese HASSAN DIAB Caretaker premier

BEIRUT: Lebanon’s caretaker premier Hassan Diab on Tuesday urged donors to “save” the country, despite the fact it has no formal government, as it struggles through a dire economic crisis.

Warning that Lebanon is “just days away from a social explosion,” Diab urged the internatio­nal community to “help save Lebanese from death and prevent Lebanon’s demise”.

He urged foreign donors to release financial aid even though the multi-confession­al country has failed to form a new government in almost 11 months.

“Linking aid to Lebanon with government formation has started to threaten the lives of Lebanese,” Diab told a Beirut meeting with foreign envoys.

Withholdin­g funds, he argued, does “not affect the corrupt. Instead it is the Lebanese people who pay a heavy price,” he said. “Save Lebanon before it’s too late.”

Lebanese are grappling with spiralling devaluatio­n and painful shortages as the country plunges deeper into what the World Bank has called one of the world’s worst economic crises since the 1850s.

The internatio­nal community has pledged humanitari­an aid but conditione­d any financial assistance to the cash-strapped interim government on the formation of a new cabinet to launch reforms.

But despite internatio­nal pressure, led by former colonial power France, the deeply divided political elite has been unable to agree on a cabinet line-up for almost 11 months.

Diab stepped down and has served as caretaker premier since the deadly Beirut port explosion of last August 4, when hundreds of tonnes of ammonium nitrate fertiliser exploded, killing more than 200 people and ravaging swathes of the capital.

The disaster overwhelme­d Beirut hospitals in the middle of the novel coronaviru­s pandemic.

In the months since, the economic crisis that started in the autumn of 2019, sparking mass street protests, has only deepened.

The Lebanese pound has lost more than 90 per cent of its value to the dollar on the black market. Plunging foreign currency reserves have translated into long queues outside petrol stations and imported medicines running out.

“Lebanon is passing through a very dark tunnel, and the suffering has reached the point of tragedy,” Diab said.

 ??  ??

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from Oman