Bangkok Post

State goes AWOL in devastated Lebanon

Tuesday’s explosion killed 110 and devastated the capital but the clean-up has been farcical, writes Dylan Collins

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In Beirut’s beloved bar districts, hundreds of young Lebanese ditched beers for brooms on Wednesday to sweep away debris in the absence of a state-sponsored clean-up operation following a deadly blast.

“What state?” scoffed 42-year-old Melissa Fadlallah, a volunteer cleaning up the hard-hit Mar Mikhail district of the Lebanese capital.

Tuesday’s explosion, which hit just a few hundred metres away at Beirut’s port, blew all the windows and doors off Mar Mikhail’s pubs, restaurant­s and apartments.

By Wednesday, a spontaneou­s cleanup operation was underway there, a glimmer of youthful solidarity and hope after a devastatin­g night.

Wearing plastic gloves and a mask, Fadlallah tossed a shard of glass as long as her arm at the door of the state electricit­y company’s administra­tive building that looms over the district.

“For me, this state is a dump — and on behalf of yesterday’s victims, the dump that killed them is going to stay a dump,” she lamented.

The blast killed more than 110 people, wounded thousands and compounded the public anger that erupted in protests last year against a government seen as corrupt and inefficien­t.

“We’re trying to fix this country. We’ve been trying to fix it for nine months but now we’re going to do it our way,” said Fadlallah.

“If we had a real state, it would have been in the street since last night cleaning and working. Where are they?”

A few civil defence workers could be seen examining building structures but they were vastly outnumbere­d by young volunteers flooding the streets to help.

In small groups, they energetica­lly swept up glass beneath blown-out buildings, dragging it into plastic bags.

Others clambered up debris-strewn stairwells to offer their homes to residents who had spent the previous night in the open air.

“We’re sending people into the damaged homes of the elderly and handicappe­d to help them find a home for tonight,” said Husam Abu Nasr, a 30-year-old volunteer.

“We don’t have a state to take these steps, so we took matters into our own hands.”

Towns across the country have offered to host Beirut families with damaged homes and the Maronite Catholic patriarcha­te announced it would open its monasterie­s and religious schools to those needing shelter.

Food was quickly taken care of, too: plastic tables loaded with donated water bottles, sandwiches and snacks were set up within hours.

“I can’t help by carrying things, so we brought food, water, chocolate and moral support,” said Rita Ferzli, 26.

“I think everyone should be here helping, especially young people.

“No one should be sitting at home — even a smile is helping right now.”

Business owners swiftly took to social

‘‘Everyone should be here helping, especially young people. No one should be sitting at home.

RITA FERZLI, 26 VOLUNTEER

media, posting offers to repair doors, paint damaged walls or replace shattered windows for free.

Abdo Amer, who owns window company Curtain Glass, said he was moved to make such an offer after narrowly surviving the blast.

“I had driven by the port just three minutes earlier,” the 37-year-old said.

He offered to replace windows for half the price but said he was now fixing some for free, given the devastatin­g situation for many families following the Lebanese currency’s staggering devaluatio­n in recent months.

“I’ve gotten more than 7,000 phone calls today and I can’t keep up,” said the father of four.

“You think the state will take up this work? Actually, let them step down and leave.”

Outrage at the government was palpable among volunteers.

Many of whom blamed government officials for failing to remove explosive materials left at the port for years.

“They’re all sitting in their chairs in the AC while people are wearing themselves out in the street,” said Mohammad Suyur, 30, as he helped sweep up on Wednesday.

“The last thing in the world they care about is this country and the people who live in it.”

He said activists were preparing to reignite the protest movement that they launched last October.

“We can’t bear more than this. This is it,” he said.

“The whole system has got to go.”

 ?? PHOTOS BY AFP ?? A wounded man lies on the ground amid debris as smoke billows in the background at the scene of a massive explosion that hit the port of Beirut in the heart of the Lebanese capital. Rescuers searched for survivors in Beirut after a cataclysmi­c explosion at the port sowed devastatio­n across entire neighbourh­oods.
INSET Women wearing face masks hold signs reading ‘History repeats itself as well as the tragedy, Toulouse 2001, Beyrouth 2020’ in Toulouse.
PHOTOS BY AFP A wounded man lies on the ground amid debris as smoke billows in the background at the scene of a massive explosion that hit the port of Beirut in the heart of the Lebanese capital. Rescuers searched for survivors in Beirut after a cataclysmi­c explosion at the port sowed devastatio­n across entire neighbourh­oods. INSET Women wearing face masks hold signs reading ‘History repeats itself as well as the tragedy, Toulouse 2001, Beyrouth 2020’ in Toulouse.

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