Gulf Times

Lebanese families hit hard by Covid crisis

- Reuters

At a street market in southern Beirut, Lebanese crowd around volunteers handing out free rations of bread and pasta, staples that have become a lifeline to families whose living standards have plunged during a financial crisis.

“People can’t buy meat or fish anymore. Chicken is getting more expensive. They can only afford vegetables and bread,” said Salwa Hable, an organiser helping distribute the privately donated food.

Lebanon’s economic crisis has brought mounting hardship for its roughly 6mn people. Prices have soared, the result of a dollar crunch that has sunk the local currency since October and eviscerate­d purchasing power. “It’s going to soon turn into hunger protests,” said Hable.

It was getting harder to solicit donations from better-off Lebanese, themselves feeling the pinch of the most destabilis­ing crisis since the 1975-1990 civil war, she said.

The worsening conditions have already threatened more serious unrest. Last month protesters defying a coronaviru­s curfew rioted, burning banks and leaving a demonstrat­or dead.

Prime Minister Hassan Diab said last week the double-blow of the financial meltdown and coronaviru­s pandemic could tip

People are eating less, with butchers complainin­g of shrinking sales, restaurant­s empty, and families making do with simple carbohydra­tes — even during the holy month of Ramadan, typically a time of nightly feasts

Lebanon into a full-blown food crisis as basics like bread become unaffordab­le.

People are eating less, with butchers complainin­g of shrinking sales, restaurant­s empty, and families making do with simple carbohydra­tes — even during the holy month of Ramadan, typically a time of nightly feasts.

“We stopped buying fruits for ourselves. We get something small for my daughter, but that’s it,” said George Ortass, 46, a taxi driver.

At a Beirut market, fish seller Noureddine Mhaysa said his sales have dipped 75% as his prices have more than doubled.

“You used to see overcrowdi­ng at the market, with people buying food, clothes, sweets. Ramadan has passed, and no one bought anything — no sweets, no clothes, no food,” said Mhaysa. Lebanon defaulted on its sovereign debt in March and has entered talks with the Internatio­nal Monetary Fund.

Beirut hopes an economic reform plan will draw billions of dollars in financing to re-launch its economy, but the near-term austerity is likely to bring further pain. Even before the coronaviru­s lockdown, hundreds of businesses were shuttered and workers laid off.

As the government has eased restrictio­ns, many businesses have remained shut anyway, the rising dollar making costs too expensive at a time when customers are scant. At Snack Henri, where previously people would line up outside for mid-day sandwiches, the restaurant sat entirely empty at noon. “I’ve been here 20 years and I’ve never seen anything like this, said Henri, the owner.

“A few days ago, someone came in and ordered a ham sandwich. I told him I don’t have ham anymore because it’s too expensive but if he can buy some, I’ll do it. And that’s what he did.”

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from Qatar