The National - News

RUSSIAN-OWNED VESSEL AND MURKY DEALS MUDDY WATERS OF PORT DISASTER

▶ Questions remain why 2,750 tonnes of explosive cargo was unloaded

- KHALED YACOUB OWEIS

A wad of cash was obligatory when going into the fenced Beirut port storage area obliterate­d on Tuesday by the explosion of ammonium nitrate that was offloaded years ago from the Rhosus, a Russian-owned, Moldovan-flagged vessel.

Hangar 12, where the hazardous material was stored, was next to other structures where customs kept commercial cargo and personal belongings of people who shipped their stuff to Lebanon.

Cash would have to be splashed to the different factions among the port’s bureaucrac­y if you wanted to retrieve your belongings.

If an intermedia­ry company were used, its bill was itemised as charging for stamps, customs duty and stevedores, who are people employed at a dock.

A fourth item, titled formalitie­s, signified bribes the clearing agent paid on the customer’s behalf.

Shipping data showed that the Rhosus stopped in Beirut because it broke down on its way from Georgia to Mozambique and that it has been in the waters off the Lebanese capital since 2014.

Two shippers in Beirut confirmed the dates and the route of the Rhosus.

The trail of the damage its cargo caused, and the trading of accusation­s among Lebanese officials that followed, are hallmarks of the murky dealings that have engulfed trade in Lebanon since the start of the civil war 45 years ago.

Lebanese officials say the Rhosus cargo of 2,750 tonnes was offloaded and languished in storage for years before igniting and devastatin­g half of Beirut this week.

The ammonium nitrate arrived as cargo on the ship in 2014, Bloomberg reported, citing two letters issued by the director general of Lebanese Customs.

For reasons that are unclear, dockworker­s unloaded the chemical, which can be used to make fertiliser­s and explosives, and put it into storage.

After Tuesday’s blast, every government department involved with the vessel mounted its own defence as to why the department should not be implicated in the disaster, revealing more about the course of events since 2014.

The head of the port, Hassan Koraytem, told pro-government broadcaste­r OTV that the customs department and state security had pushed for the material to be exported or removed, but that nothing happened.

He said a court ordered the cargo to be offloaded from the Rhosus, but he did not say why.

Lebanese law firm Baroudi & Associates, which has its offices in Beirut, said in 2015 that it was hired on behalf of “various creditors” who lodged claims against the Rhosus.

The Lebanese firm said in an article that two of its lawyers wrote about the rights of the crew, that it acted on the instructio­n of these creditors and obtained three arrest orders against the vessel.

“Efforts to get in touch with the owners, charterers and cargo owners to obtain payment failed,” the 2015 article on Ship Arrested, a newsletter on maritime legal issues, said.

It said that, upon inspection, the vessel was forbidden from sailing and shortly afterwards was abandoned by its owners, leading to various creditors coming forward with legal claims.

“Owing to the risks associated with retaining the ammonium nitrate on board the vessel, the port authoritie­s discharged the cargo on to the port’s warehouses,” it said.

The National contacted the lawyers who wrote the article, but they did not reply. The Beirut landline for Baroudi & Associates was not operationa­l.

The Serbian Times news site identified the owner as Russian businessma­n Igor Grechushki­n, born in Khabarovsk, a city in south-east Russia.

A document leaked to Lebanese media showed that the customs department made repeated requests to the judiciary, with the last being in 2017, for the cargo to be re-exported or to be sold to the Lebanese Explosives Company.

The company is in Al Koura in north Lebanon and an official permit shows that it previously imported ammonium nitrate, which is commonly used in Lebanon to blast rocks for constructi­on.

The material is also a weapon of choice for militant groups around the world.

A large-scale Lebanese trader who owns a fleet of ships told

The National that one potential player in the saga was missing among the trail of official documents and public pronouncem­ents about the cargo of the Rhosus.

“Everyone has a share in the port. But nobody can move so much ammonium nitrate without getting the OK from Hezbollah,” he said.

“This is how the system works.”

Shipping data shows the ‘Rhosus’ stopped in Beirut because it broke down on its way from Georgia to Mozambique

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