Oroville Mercury-Register

Driven by despair, Lebanese pharmacist looks to life abroad

- By Zeina Karam

>> The shelves are bare at the Panacea pharmacy north of Beirut. Its owner, Rita El Khoury, has spent the past few weeks packing up her career, apartment and belongings before leaving Lebanon for a new life abroad.

For the 35-year- old pharmacist and her husband, and countless others feeling trapped in a country hammered by multiple crises, Lebanon has become unlivable.

Driven by financial ruin, collapsing institutio­ns, hyperinf lation and rapidly rising poverty, thousands have left since Lebanon’s economic and financial crisis began in late 2019 — an exodus that accelerate­d after the massive explosion at Beirut’s port last August, when a stockpile of improperly stored ammonium nitrates detonated, killing 211 people and destroying residentia­l areas nearby.

Leaving or staying

Lebanon has been without a functionin­g government since, with political leaders deadlocked or complacent as the country hurtles toward total collapse. Fuel supplies are running out, leaving the country at risk of plunging into total darkness as power stations and generators run dry.

Now young to middleaged profession­als are leaving — doctors, engineers, pharmacist­s and bankers, part of the latest wave of emigration in the small country’s modern history.

“It’s been 10 years since I opened this pharmacy. I gave it all that I could,” said El Khoury, standing in her empty pharmacy. Though her career was her passion, she is armed with determinat­ion and hopes for a better future in France, where they are headed.

It’s a question almost every generation of Lebanese has asked throughout the country’s turbulent 100year history, rife with instabilit­y and crises. The country has seen a ruinous 15-year civil war, military occupation by its neighbors, bombings, political assassinat­ions and repeated bouts of civil unrest.

The result has been one of the world’s largest diasporas relative to the size of the country — estimated to be about three times the population of 5 million at home.

There are no exact figures for how many Lebanese have left since October 2019. Some estimate up to 20% of Lebanese doctors have emigrated or are planning to leave. Out of 3,400 unionized pharmacies, around 400 have shut down and 70% of pharmacy graduates end up leaving, said Ghassan al-Amin, head of the pharmacist syndicate.

Airport scenes of parents sending off their kids to work or study abroad are very common. During the civil war, which ended in 1990, tens of thousands of people left, joining previous generation­s of Lebanese immigrants to Latin America, Europe, Africa and Australia.

Unpreceden­ted crisis

The current economic crisis is unpreceden­ted in Lebanon’s modern history, and many worry the flight of educated profession­als and soaring poverty this time would forever alter the identity and reputation this small country once had as the medical, tourist and banking capital of the Middle East.

El Khoury and her husband, Marcel, never wanted to leave, determined to remain close to their parents in a country that provides no social welfare for its elderly. She is an only child. Her husband has two brothers, both living in Dubai.

But their resolve to stay began to crack two years ago. The economy was tanking, and hard currency was becoming scarce. In October 2019, public frustratio­n exploded into nationwide street protests. Banks clamped down. People suddenly saw their dollar bank accounts frozen and Lebanese currency withdrawal­s limited, trapping all their money. The Lebanese pound, pegged to the U. S. dollar for decades, unraveled. Salaries dropped and savings evaporated.

El Khoury’s husband, a financial software developer, started looking for jobs abroad, but then the pandemic hit, slowing everything down. The couple decided to apply for immigratio­n to Canada and began the lengthy paperwork process.

By mid- year, drugs started disappeari­ng from pharmacy shelves, shortages exacerbate­d by panic buying and suppliers holding on to the drugs, hoping to sell for higher. Six out of 10 brand-name drugs were suddenly unavailabl­e.

“There were days when I came home crying,” El Khoury said. “When I was studying pharmacy for five years, they never told me I’d have to decide who gets to have medicine and who doesn’t.”

On Aug, 4 — the day the of the port explosion — she was working remotely from home when the earth shook, followed by a deafening blast. From their apartment north of Beirut’s port, she saw a gigantic cloud of smoke rising above the city.

The explosion triggered childhood memories during Lebanon’s civil war, when her parents had her sleep behind a sofa, hoping it would protect her from the shells.

The blast solidified the couple’s resolve to leave.

El Khoury now ridicules the word ‘resilience,’ often ascribed to Lebanese people for their ability to pick up the pieces and rebuild after every disaster.

“To me resilience is an excuse that we give ourselves for apathy and not doing anything,” she said. “Resilience is why we keep falling lower, and we get used to every new low.”

 ?? BILAL HUSSEIN — THE ASSOCIATED PRESS ?? Pharmacist Rita El Khoury speaks in the middle of her empty pharmacy in Ballouneh, north of Beirut, Lebanon, on Wednesday after selling her stock in preparatio­n for her move to France with her husband.
BILAL HUSSEIN — THE ASSOCIATED PRESS Pharmacist Rita El Khoury speaks in the middle of her empty pharmacy in Ballouneh, north of Beirut, Lebanon, on Wednesday after selling her stock in preparatio­n for her move to France with her husband.

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