The Borneo Post (Sabah)

Guilt-riven Lebanon expats ship aid as crisis bites at home

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DUBAI: Lebanese expats in the wealthy UAE, many of them riven with guilt, are scrambling to ship essential goods and medicine to family and friends in their crisisstri­cken home country.

“How can I sit in the comfort of my home in air-conditioni­ng and a full fridge knowing that my people, my friends and family, are struggling back home?” asked Jennifer Houchaime.

“Oh, the guilt is very, very real,” said the 33-year-old resident of Dubai, a member of the United Arab Emirates which is home to tens of thousands of Lebanese.

“It’s guilt, shame and nostalgia.”

Lebanon’s economy has collapsed under a long-running political class accused of incompeten­ce and corruption.

Its currency has plunged to an all-time low, sparking inflation and eroding the purchasing power of a population denied free access to their own savings by stringent banking controls.

Lebanon is running out of everything, from fuel and gas to medicine and bread, and more than three-quarters of its population is now considered to be living under the poverty line.

Social media platforms are filled with posts by Lebanese appealing for contacts abroad to send basic goods such as baby formula, diapers, painkiller­s, coffee and sanitary pads.

Aya Majzoub, a researcher with Human Rights Watch, said trust in the Lebanese government is at an all-time low.

“It is unsurprisi­ng that local and grassroots initiative­s have sprung up to fill this gap while bypassing the government that they view as corrupt, inefficien­t and incompeten­t,” she told AFP.

With no faith in the Lebanese authoritie­s, expats have taken it upon themselves to transport aid.

Houchaime and a number of her Lebanese friends fill their bags with over-the-counter medication and food items every time they travel home.

The Dubai-based airline Emirates is allowing an extra 10 kilos of baggage for passengers to Beirut from certain destinatio­ns until the end of this month.

For Dima Hage Hassan, 33, a trip to Lebanon opened her eyes to the unfolding disaster.

“I was in Lebanon, and I had money, and I had a car with fuel, and I went around from pharmacy to pharmacy unable to find medicine for my mother’s ear infection,” she said.

 ?? — AFP photo ?? The Libera tanker is moored off Lebanon’s Beirut port. Lebanon defaulted on its debt last year and can no longer afford to import key goods, including petrol for vehicles and diesel to power generators during almost round-the-clock power cuts, amidst the worst-ever financial crisis, with a currency that has lost around 90 per cent of its value, people’s savings trapped in banks and qualified labour emigrating in droves.
— AFP photo The Libera tanker is moored off Lebanon’s Beirut port. Lebanon defaulted on its debt last year and can no longer afford to import key goods, including petrol for vehicles and diesel to power generators during almost round-the-clock power cuts, amidst the worst-ever financial crisis, with a currency that has lost around 90 per cent of its value, people’s savings trapped in banks and qualified labour emigrating in droves.

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