Bangkok Post

Thais offer help to blast-hit Beirut

Over 4,000 people injured: Red Cross

- BANGKOK POST AND AGENCIES

Thailand stands ready to provide humanitari­an assistance to Lebanon following the devastatin­g explosions in Beirut on Tuesday which killed over 100 people and injured thousands.

According to the city governor, Marwan Abboud, the huge blast at Lebanon’s main port in Beirut has left 300,000 people homeless and caused damage across half of the city estimated yesterday at more than US$3 billion.

Thailand’s Foreign Minister Don Pramudwina­i said yesterday the government is willing to provide help such as medical supplies or blood plasma upon request. Foreign Ministry spokesman Cherdkiat Atthakor said there were about 200 Thais working in Lebanon though there had been no reports of any Thais killed or injured.

The Foreign Ministry and the Royal Thai Embassy in Riyadh, Saudi Arabia, are monitoring the situation. Those affected by the tragedy can contact the Royal Thai Embassy in Riyadh on: (+966) 055 462 2005 / 055 798 2002 (consulate), (+966) 050 900 2103 (labour) and website http://www.thaiembass­y.org/riyadh/th/home.

Prime Minister Prayut Chan-o-cha and Mr Don yesterday issued messages of condolence­s to their Lebanese counterpar­ts.

Meanwhile, Lebanese officials said 2,750 tonnes of ammonium nitrate, used in fertiliser­s and bombs, are thought to have provided fuel for the blast. The chemicals had been stored for six years at the port without safety measures, which lead to the massive explosions.

Thai Defence Ministry spokesman Lt Gen Kongcheep Tantravani­ch said Thailand has proper measures in place to ensure the safety of such chemicals. Ammonium nitrate imports are treated as an armament, their storage and use regulated by the Arms Control Act. “We can trace how much has been used, and what it is used for. Everything must be recorded and can be examined.”

BEIRUT: Rescuers searched for survivors in Beirut yesterday after a cataclysmi­c explosion at the port sowed devastatio­n across entire neighbourh­oods, killing more than 100 people, wounding thousands and plunging Lebanon deeper into crisis.

The blast, which appeared to have been caused by a fire igniting 2,750 tonnes of ammonium nitrate left unsecured in a warehouse, was felt as far away as Cyprus, some 240 kilometres to the northwest.

The scale of the destructio­n was such that the Lebanese capital resembled the scene of an earthquake, with thousands of people left homeless and thousands more cramming into overwhelme­d hospitals for treatment.

“We’ve had some dark days in Lebanon over the years but this is something else,” said Rami Rifai, a 38-yearold engineer, speaking from a hospital where his two daughters were receiving treatment after sustaining cuts despite being half a kilometre from the seat of the blast.

“We already had the economic crisis, a government of thieves and coronaviru­s. I didn’t think it could get worse but now I don’t know if this country can get up again. Everyone is going to try to leave. I will try to leave,” he said, his voice choked by tears.

In the areas closest to the port, the amount of destructio­n caused by the long years of civil war between 1975 and 1990 was achieved in a second by a blast that levelled buildings within a radius of several hundred metres.

One resident of Mar Mikhail, one of the most affected neighbourh­oods, said she saw bodies strewn in the middle of the street, apparently thrown off balconies and rooftops by the blast.

Many people were watching and filming with their phones after an earlier and smaller explosion was heard in the port and ignited a fire.

The resulting footage, which was widely shared on social media, shows a ball of fire and smoke rising above Beirut and a white shockwave engulfing everything around it.

The mushroom-shaped explosion — which seismologi­sts said was logged as the equivalent of a 3.3 magnitude quake — and the scope of the damage drew nuclear analogies in many people’s accounts of the tragedy.

“The Apocalypse” read the headline of L’Orient-Le Jour, the main Frenchlang­uage daily in Lebanon, a country that has seen its share of explosions in its recent past, but none quite this big.

The embattled government of Prime Minister Hassan Diab described the circumstan­ces at the port that led to the explosion as “unacceptab­le” and vowed to investigat­e.

“Those responsibl­e for this catastroph­e will pay the price,” he said.

Messages of support poured in from around the world for Lebanon, whose economy was already on its knees after defaulting on sovereign debt earlier this year.

A crippling devaluatio­n has sent poverty levels soaring to an estimated 50% of the population and for a country so heavily reliant on imports, the obliterati­on of the main port signalled more hardship ahead.

Criticism of the government was already rife on social media, where Lebanese users argued that a disaster of such magnitude could only strike in a state whose institutio­ns are crippled by incompeten­ce and corruption.

Late on Tuesday, thousands of families drove out of Beirut to take their families to safety, but many others were left stranded without a roof, unable to go anywhere or unwilling to leave their gutted homes open to looters.

The rescue effort was slowed at night by the lack of electricit­y, which was already intermitte­nt at best in much of the city before the explosion.

The security forces sealed off a huge area around the blast site, turning away residents trying to reach their homes to assess the damage.

Johnny Assaf, an estate agent whose home and office were destroyed by the blast, said he lost everything except his life.

“I saw the mushroom first, then the force of the blast swept through my office,” he said, nursing a hastily bandaged arm.

“In hospital they stitched me up without anaesthesi­a and then stopped before they were done because too many serious injuries were being rushed in. I saw people die in front of me,” he said.

Hospitals that had already been stretched to the brink by a spike in the number of coronaviru­s cases in recent days were pushed to new limits by the influx of wounded and forced to turn many away.

Saint-Georges hospital was badly damaged by the explosion and lost several members of its staff.

The Red Cross said yesterday morning that more than 100 deaths had been confirmed. It also reported around 4,000 injured, prompting fears that the death toll could rise significan­tly.

As people have been unable to withdraw even small amounts of cash from banks since the start of the year, there was little hope for a timely compensati­on.

 ?? AFP ?? The scene of an explosion near the port in the Lebanese capital Beirut. Two huge blasts rocked the Lebanese capital, shaking buildings and sending huge plumes of smoke billowing into the sky.
AFP The scene of an explosion near the port in the Lebanese capital Beirut. Two huge blasts rocked the Lebanese capital, shaking buildings and sending huge plumes of smoke billowing into the sky.
 ?? AFP ?? A helicopter puts out a fire at the scene of an explosion at the port of Lebanon’s capital Beirut on Tuesday.
AFP A helicopter puts out a fire at the scene of an explosion at the port of Lebanon’s capital Beirut on Tuesday.
 ?? AFP ?? A wounded man is checked by a fireman near the site of the explosion.
AFP A wounded man is checked by a fireman near the site of the explosion.

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