Daily Dispatch

Another fire in Beirut unnerves residents shattered after blast

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A fire erupted in a landmark building in Beirut’s commercial district on Tuesday, the second blaze this month to send shudders through a capital still in shock after a massive port blast in August ripped through the Mediterran­ean city.

There were no immediate reports of casualties and the blaze was quickly extinguish­ed, but it left residents exasperate­d in a nation that has been hammered by a deep economic crisis and which is waiting for its politician­s to form a new government.

“It’s terrible. It’s unbelievab­le,” said Joe Sayegh, 48, who had been on a jog through the city. “Every day we have a problem.”

Fire trucks quickly doused the flames that charred a corner of the futuristic building designed by the practice set up by the late Zaha Hadid, the renowned British-Iraqi architect.

The building near the seafront and its curved lines have become a prominent feature of the central commercial area rebuilt after the 1975-1990 civil war.

Solidere, the company set up to reconstruc­t Beirut, said initial findings indicated the fire in the building, which has been under constructi­on for years, was caused by an accident.

During rebuilding of Lebanon’s capital, skyscraper­s designed by internatio­nal architects have gone up and historical Ottoman-era buildings have been renovated.

But protests during an economic crisis that was caused by a mountain of debt had already driven many businesses out of the city centre and left many buildings scarred even before the August 4 port blast ruined another swathe of the capital.

The government resigned after the port blast, which was blamed on highly explosive ammonium nitrate kept in poor storage conditions for years.

This month, a big port fire flared up among the ruined warehouses, adding to the devastatio­n. France is pressing Lebanon to form a new government to tackle endemic corruption and implement reforms to unlock aid. But many Lebanese remain sceptical the country’s political elite can chart a new course. —

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