Arab News

Crises will not stop expats visiting Lebanon

Visitors find gloom, nervousnes­s, lack of electricit­y, gasoline and life ‘too expensive’ in the country

- Najia Houssari Beirut

According to the statistics of Beirut-Rafic Hariri Internatio­nal Airport, the number of passengers who came to Lebanon on July 1 exceeded 15,000, including 13,606 Lebanese expatriate­s. A record number of 20,000 returning expatriate­s was registered by the end of this week.

Nisrine, who came back from Germany with her children for a summer vacation, said: “People look tired, nobody laughs, everybody is nervous and tense, they start to complain the moment they see you; no electricit­y nor gasoline, and life is too expensive.”

Loris, a Lebanese woman whose daughter is getting married, said that her relatives coming from Sweden and Canada for the wedding were surprised by the overcrowde­d coffee shops and restaurant­s in Broummana, Jounieh, Byblos and Batroun, while darkness prevails in Beirut. The Lebanese capital was hit by a massive explosion last year.

Pierre Ashkar, president of the Associatio­n of Hotel Owners in Lebanon, said: “The political and security situation does not seem to make expatriate­s leave the country after the prime ministerde­signate Saad Hariri resigned ... They have always been successful in finding solutions.”

Ashkar estimated the number of Iraqis who came to Lebanon during June at about 30,000. He said: “These people are fleeing from the security situation in their country, which is far worse than that of Lebanon.”

He said: “As for the Lebanese expatriate­s if they face a blocked road, they can go to other roads which they know. And if there is tension in the capital, they can go to guesthouse­s in Ras Baalbek and other remote villages.”

Ashkar said: “The explosion of the Port of Beirut last year resulted in the closing of (many) luxurious hotels ... (This situation) reflects the huge economic blow to the capital.

“Prices in Lebanon are much cheaper for expatriate­s or tourists than for Lebanese people who earn their income in Lebanese pounds. However, the huge increase in the exchange rate of the US dollar in the black market is causing problems for the owners of tourist venues.” The US dollar exchange rate in the black market has passed 22,000 Lebanese pounds for $1.

Most Lebanese people find the price of a meal in a restaurant extravagan­t. Yet you have to book ahead to reserve a table in restaurant­s and wedding halls in hotels are fully reserved throughout the summer.

May, a Lebanese lady living in Canada, returned to Lebanon for the summer and did not find the country cheap. She said: “I cannot cope with the increase in the exchange rate of the dollar.”

She said: “How can I spend money while my parents’ pension is worth nothing ... My daughter could not go to the dentist because there are no antibiotic­s, and I did not bring medicines with me from Canada.”

The endless crises that Lebanon has faced for more than a year have not deterred expatriate­s from visiting their home country in large numbers, Middle East Airlines officials have told Arab News.

 ?? Supplied ?? The political and security situation does not seem to make expatriate­s leave the country after Hariri resigned.
Supplied The political and security situation does not seem to make expatriate­s leave the country after Hariri resigned.

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