Los Angeles Times

Lebanese leaders deflect blame for blast

Skepticism of the government grows among public and the global community.

- By Abby Sewell Sewell is a Times special correspond­ent.

BEIRUT — Following Tuesday’s deadly port explosion in Beirut, Lebanese officials face increasing ire from the public and a skeptical internatio­nal community that has, neverthele­ss, promised to provide humanitari­an aid to help the devastated city get back on its feet.

While both Lebanese citizens and foreign leaders have pushed for an overhaul in the governance of the small Mediterran­ean country that was already in the throes of a major economic crisis before the explosion, Lebanese leaders appeared to be digging in their heels.

Beirut residents, who have been protesting government corruption and inertia and failing public services since October, were enraged when they learned that Tuesday’s blast had been caused by a stockpile of ammonium nitrate, a highly volatile chemical that had been sitting in a warehouse in the port since 2013 despite warnings of the risks.

A protest in front of the parliament building in Beirut on Thursday night was met with tear gas.

An announceme­nt posted online for another, likely larger, protest planned for Saturday afternoon took a militant tone: “On August 4, 2020, the criminal authority dropped a bomb in central Beirut and declared that there are no limits to its criminalit­y … On August 4, 2020, the authority declared war on us. As for us, we announce the beginning of the liberation battle.”

A number of port officials have been placed under house arrest over the explosion, but to date no highprofil­e government figures have resigned or shown any inclinatio­n to do so.

In remarks Friday, President Michel Aoun rejected calls by some in Lebanon for an internatio­nal investigat­ion into the cause of the port explosion and also seemed to indicate that no immediate government shakeup would be forthcomin­g.

“What has been said about the resignatio­n of the government and the formation of a national unity government requires preparing the appropriat­e atmosphere,” he said. “We cannot call for a unity government to reach later on ... the division that we have witnessed in previous government­s.”

Aoun also suggested that the explosion might have been triggered by an attack — contrary to the prevailing theory that had been previously put forth by officials — that an accidental fire at the port had spread to the warehouse holding the ammonium nitrate.

“There are two possibilit­ies for what happened. Either it was a result of negligence or external interferen­ce by means of a missile or bomb,” he said, adding that he was seeking aerial photos of the site to see whether there were planes or missiles in the air.

Also Friday, Hassan Nasrallah, leader of the militia and political party Hezbollah, appeared in a televised speech in which he denied accusation­s that Hezbollah had stored weapons at the port or had any oversight over port operations.

“We do not manage the port or control the port or run the port or intervene in the port, nor do we know what is present in the port,” he said.

“Hezbollah might know the port of Haifa better than the port of Beirut,” he added.

While political leaders in Lebanon def lected responsibi­lity, the internatio­nal community whose help they desperatel­y need remained wary.

French President Emmanuel Macron, who visited the site of the blast on Thursday, promised aid but also chastised the Lebanese political class, saying, “A new political order must be reestablis­hed and radical change is needed” in the country.

France, which formerly ruled Lebanon as a colonial power, has in more recent years frequently bailed the country out, politicall­y and monetarily. In 2018, Paris hosted the CEDRE conference, which raised $11 billion in pledges of financing for infrastruc­ture projects in Lebanon, but the Lebanese government did not implement the required economic and governance reforms, so it never got the money.

During Lebanon’s deepening economic and currency crisis in recent months, donor countries had remained reluctant to offer a bailout unless Lebanon could first reach a deal with the Internatio­nal Monetary Fund, from which it has requested $10 billion. And the United States, which regards the current government of Lebanon as Hezbollah-dominated and considers Hezbollah a terrorist group, has also been reluctant to offer support.

But after the disaster, Macron announced he would organize an internatio­nal donor conference, to be held Sunday under the auspices of the European Commission, to bring in contributi­ons for medicine, food and housing to address the most urgent needs following the disaster that left over 150 dead, 5,000 injured and many more homeless.

Apart from the immediate emergency response needs, Beirut’s governor has estimated the city suffered $3 billion in infrastruc­ture damage.

A number of countries have pledged funds, including the U.S., which has offered $17 million, and the European Union, which pledged 33 million euros. Others, including regional rivals Iran and Saudi Arabia, have sent planeloads of emergency supplies, including medicine, food and shelter kits, or have dispatched medical teams.

Imad Salamey, an associate professor of political science and internatio­nal affairs at the Lebanese American

University who has written a book on Lebanese political history, said the suffering caused by the explosion had given the Lebanese government an opening to “break the informal sanctions imposed on it by the internatio­nal community.”

“The political establishm­ent will try to leverage the situation to its own political gain,” he said.

However, Salamey said Lebanon has less leverage than it might have in the past, when rival internatio­nal players jockeying for power in the region might have aimed to gain influence by providing aid. Iraq and Syria are now the more geopolitic­ally important sites in the region, he said, while Lebanon “does not anymore have the strategic role that it had in the past, so it is not likely that there will be an internatio­nal competitio­n to gain political advantages or a political role in the country.”

On the other hand, Lebanon is increasing­ly desperate, so the internatio­nal players that are willing to help may have more influence now, said Maha Yahya, director of the Carnegie Middle East Center. That could include pushing for the resignatio­n of the current government headed by Prime Minister Hassan Diab and putting in place a transition­al government to steer through the crisis.

Diab was already on politicall­y thin ice over the economic situation before the explosion. But Lebanese politics often tilts toward inertia because of its sectarian-based power-sharing system, which was set up after the civil war to preserve the peace but leads to frequent stalemates among competing factions.

Yahya said although “it’s clear that even the political parties that initially backed it no longer want this government,” it remains in place because “they can’t agree on who to replace it or what to replace it with.”

But now the disaster might force their hand, she said.

“We’re no longer talking about Lebanon falling into the abyss — it’s already there,” she said. “So, the only way it can make its way out is through internatio­nal support, both political and financial .... The way I see things going, I think if there is enough internatio­nal pressure, this government may actually be forced to go.”

 ?? AFP via Getty Images ?? THE LIVESTOCK CARRIER ship Abou Karim lies on its side near other damaged vessels in the port of Beirut on Friday, three days after a massive explosion of ammonium nitrate devastated the Lebanese capital.
AFP via Getty Images THE LIVESTOCK CARRIER ship Abou Karim lies on its side near other damaged vessels in the port of Beirut on Friday, three days after a massive explosion of ammonium nitrate devastated the Lebanese capital.

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