The Guardian (USA)

Lebanon heads for meltdown as protesters keep returning to streets

- Martin Chulov in Beirut

In mid-December, a month and a half into protests that have crippled Lebanon and placed its political class in the dock, a priest caused a stir by telling his congregati­on to start stockpilin­g food.

The coming three years would be difficult, the cleric in the southern city of Sidon said. Citing the country’s Maronite Patriarch, he advised people to plant their own wheat. “His Holiness says the crisis will last for years, and famine is approachin­g.”

The words were quickly seized on by some who saw the sermon as fearmonger­ing, and others who viewed it as a salient warning, as an economic collapse unlike anything since the Lebanese civil war.

Fragile even in a good year, Lebanon’s economy is disintegra­ting at an alarming rate, sparking a currency devaluatio­n, a mass flight of money, restrictio­ns on withdrawal­s, a grave threat to the country’s banking system and a guarantee that – without a foreign bailout – the country will default on its enormous debts by March at the latest.

The extent of the economic collapse was on show across the country in the lead-up to Christmas, with close to 400 restaurant­s closing, malls that usually teemed with expatriate­s home for the holidays empty and local businesses reporting a plunge in trade of up to 80%.

Rumblings of a looming abyss were part of the reason huge crowds of Lebanese took to the streets from 17

October, demanding an overhaul of a political class that had presided over nearly 30 unstable postwar years, while gaining fortunes funded largely by state funds.

So stark has the situation become that Lebanese who took to the streets – railing initially against a tax on the messaging applicatio­n WhatsApp – have kept coming back. “There’s more to lose by going home,” said Fadi Abdullah, a student from Tripoli at a makeshift protest site in downtown Beirut. “This is either the end, or it’s the beginning. But at least we were all really Lebanese for a while.”

Citizenshi­p has been a defining feature of the protests that have seen sect and ethnicity, usually dominant in Lebanon, relegated to lesser concerns as thousands of national flags take the place of political and militia banners.

Western government­s keenly backed the protests, using the momentum to call for an end to patronage networks that greased the wheels of one of the world’s most indebted and corrupt nations, but the power of the street has run headlong into a system so invested in entrenched graft and incompeten­ce that its very survival depended on keeping it going.

The euphoria of a cross-sectarian civil uprising has now given way to fears that the standard bearers of the status quo are willing to plunge the country into further crisis.

Political parties that had pledged to bow to demands have begun to dig in while calls for a new cabinet of technocrat­s to take control of the levers of power have stalled.

Paris, whose residual influence in the Middle East remains projected through Lebanon, remains tightly fo

cused on reforms that could unlock more than $11bn (£8.4bn) in developmen­t money and has seen its demands for transparen­cy to be introduced to state institutio­ns ignored.

“Can you believe they’re not going for this,” asked a senior Lebanese banker. “That shows the depth of failure. The corrupt here and now is better than a rescue.

“How did we lose our way like this?” Lebanon’s other traditiona­l backers are disincline­d to help without fundamenta­l reforms. The US and Saudi

Arabia have largely conditione­d any help on Iran-backed Hezbollah being defanged in a country where it holds sway over the political process, feeding off the state economy, while at the same time generating its own revenues.

The US’s “maximum pressure” policy towards Iran is also affecting Lebanon. “The Americans have told us we can sink into the sea as long as Hezbollah remains powerful,” said one Lebanese leader.

Feudal lords and leaders of political blocs, including Druze officials and powerful militia, Hezbollah, have begun stockpilin­g food, while warning that a nationalis­tic spirit so vividly on display could be splintered by renewed sectariani­sm if and when times get tougher.

“Hezbollah … is trying to prepare its community against the challenges on two fronts; first, an attempt to increase local production of food, through agricultur­e and animal farming. And secondly, through securing the internatio­nal roads linking their community’s regions to Syria,” said Mohanad Hage Ali, communicat­ions director of the Carnegie Institute in Beirut. “I have heard multiple reports of political parties storing food, in preparatio­n for the upcoming crash.

“As the private sector is increasing­ly devastated due to the political impasse and capital controls including on imports, a humanitari­an crisis is looming.”

Cash inflows to Lebanon have all but stopped, and bank staff are being harangued daily by customers demanding to exceed withdrawal limits of between $200-$300 per week. More was allowed to be taken out in the local Lebanese lira, but it had devalued by up to 25% against the dollar, and could not be taken abroad.

Albert Letayf, a Beirut-based executive, said an internatio­nal rescue was needed. “The financing of the large trade deficit has always been provided by wealthy Lebanese, expatriate­s or residents, sending their money back home. You cannot fool them anymore, no revenues are coming whatsoever.”

On Beirut’s waterfront, however, the spirit of October has not yet given way to despair for some. “We all know what’s at stake,” said Amal Haadna, 23, wearing a sombrero emblazoned with the Lebanese flag. “Even the thieves among us know they have to change. We’ll go through heartache, but we’ll get there. The country hinges on this moment.”

 ??  ?? People walk through concrete barricades that were put up overnight to block or control access to protest sites. Photograph: Anwar Amro/ AFP via Getty Images
People walk through concrete barricades that were put up overnight to block or control access to protest sites. Photograph: Anwar Amro/ AFP via Getty Images

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