Gulf News

Macron visit: Will Lebanon ever get justice?

The rotten political system and its corrupt leaders are the real culprits in the port blast

- BY MOHAMMED ALMEZEL | Editor-at-Large

Iwas t was an awkward scene. In fact, it surreal watching French President Emmanuel Macron touring Beirut on Thursday, in the wake of the port blast, talking to the crowds and promising to stand by the Lebanese people, not their government.

What made it awkward was the absence of the Lebanese authoritie­s. The country’s leaders were watching Macron live on television, just like everyone else. Meanwhile, Macron felt at home. He was mobbed like a hero. I am sure he would not get such a warm treatment in his capital.

It was his moment: the undisputed leader of the former French colony. Most likely he was thinking about that when he told the mesmerised crowd that he will offer the Lebanese leaders a plan to fix Lebanon’s dysfunctio­nal political system and would be back in September to follow up on its implementa­tion.

That would have sounded strange and undiplomat­ic in any other circumstan­ces. Or if Macron had said it in another country. But in Lebanon, it didn’t feel strange at all. The Macron scene zoomed in on the main cause of the catastroph­ic Beirut port explosion that left at least 135 dead and thousands injured. It is simply the absence of the state.

More than 2,700 tonnes of the highly explosive ammonium nitrate, the equivalent of 1,155 tonnes of TNT, was stored in a warehouse in the port, according to Lebanese security officials. The hazardous shipment, confiscate­d in 2014 from a Russian-owned cargo ship, was lying there for the past six years! Port officials claim that they had requested several times to have the shipment removed but “no one listened”. The military police arrested 16 port staff on Thursday, pending an investigat­ion into the cause of the disaster and to determine the real culprits.

Inefficien­t state

I doubt we will know who the real culprits are. But all the Lebanese know them. They are the same people who have been running the country for the past 30 years — since the end of the civil war. It is necessary to indict and punish the sloppy and corrupt port officials. But it would not be enough. It would not be justice. To get real justice, the entire era of the last 30 years must stand trial — the corrupt, rotten and inefficien­t state and its leaders.

The Lebanese civil war (1975-1990), started after years of political tension between the several communal factions. The Muslims complained that the Maronites controlled the state and most of the jobs. The Christians, on the other hand, opposed the government decision to host the Palestinia­n armed factions following the Israeli occupation of the West Bank in June 1967.

The nation was falling apart and the political tension simmering when on April 13, 1975, a bus carrying Lebanese and Palestinia­n civilians was attacked in the East Beirut suburb of Ain Al Rumannah following an argument with church guards, who belong to a Christian militia. They opened fire, killing 27 passengers. It was claimed that the massacre was in retaliatio­n to an earlier attack on the nearby church. The massacre was all what the political rivals needed to set the nation on fire. Three decades of war, massacres and mass destructio­n cost Lebanon more than 100,000 lives and displaced nearly one million people. Thousands remain missing to this day.

In 1990, Saudi Arabia hosted a national conference in which the rival factions agreed to end the war, elect a new parliament, form a national unity government and write a new political charter, Al Taif Agreement, in which the Muslims and Christians got equal share of the Parliament seats and cabinet positions. It was a miracle.

Flawed agreement

But there was an inherent fatal flaw in the agreement, for which Lebanon continues to pay a high price. It was signed and, of course, implemente­d by the same militia leaders who led ruthless armed groups that committed gruesome massacre for years. The new chapter also stipulated that all crimes committed during the war are pardoned. The militias won, and the Lebanese people lost, again. For the sake of ‘social peace’ and reconcilia­tion, the war ended without accountabi­lity. No one was questioned. On the contrary, the warlords arrived back in Lebanon in 1990 as the new statesmen. They must have taken off their uniforms on the plane.

And for the past 30 years, these same militia leaders occupied key positions, divided the country’s revenue among them, and paid money to buy loyalty.

Moreover, while the Taif Agreement disarmed all the militias, it allowed one militia, Hezbollah, to keep its arms ‘because its arms are meant to defend the country against Israel’, it was said. However, as the only armed group in the country, Hezbollah has become the de facto kingmaker. No one dares to oppose a powerful group that has more sophistica­ted weapons than the national army. When Hezbollah invaded Beirut in 2007, nobody was able to push it back. And nobody was able to hold the group accountabl­e.

Narrow financial, political interests

An internatio­nal court was scheduled to issue its verdict few days after the port blast (it was postponed for 10 days) in the case against four of its members in the assassinat­ion of former Prime Minster Rafik Hariri in 2005 — another epic event that shook the country’s fundamenta­ls. The Lebanese government could not be trusted to handle the case and it was assigned to a special internatio­nal tribunal.

Again, the total absence of the state. There is no state. There are only former and current militia leaders who pursue their own narrow financial and political interests.

For the past 30 years, these leaders failed or perhaps didn’t want to develop a viable, functionin­g state. The Lebanese are among the most educated, talented and entreprene­urial people in the world. But they have been failed by the system — a flawed system that led to the civil war and the one that took over after the war.

The corrupt system and those on top of it are the real culprits of the port explosion. They are the ones that should be put on trial. If that happens in Lebanon, Macron won’t need to come back in September.

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