San Francisco Chronicle

Many blame lax leadership for explosion

- Bassem Mroue and Sarah El Deeb are Associated Press writers. By Bassem Mroue and Sarah El Deeb

BEIRUT — Residents of Beirut vented their fury at Lebanon’s leaders Thursday during a visit by French President Emmanuel Macron, blaming them for the deadly explosion that ravaged the capital. Shouting, “Revolution!” they crowded around the visiting leader who promised to press the politician­s for reform.

A military judge leading the investigat­ion into Tuesday’s blast said 16 employees of Beirut’s port, where the explosion took place, had been detained. He said 18 had been questioned, including port and customs officials, according to the state news agency.

But while investigat­ors focus on port officials, many Lebanese put the blame squarely on the political elite and the corruption and mismanagem­ent that even before the disaster had pushed the country to the brink of economic collapse.

The Cabinet was previously warned by a security agency that a stockpile of explosive chemicals stored at the port was dangerous, Lebanon’s customs chief said — a report that could raise questions of highlevel neglect.

That stockpile of 2,750 tons of ammonium nitrate set off the massive blast, apparently when touched off by a fire at the port. The chemical had been left sitting in a warehouse ever since it was confiscate­d from an impounded cargo ship in 2013.

The explosion, powerful enough to be felt in

Cyprus across the Eastern Mediterran­ean, killed more than 130 people, wounded thousands and blasted buildings for miles around. Two days later, some 300,000 people — more than 12% of Beirut’s population — can’t return to their homes, officials estimate. Damaged hospitals are still struggling to deal with the wounded. Dozens are still missing. Officials have estimated losses at $10 billion to $15 billion.

Furthermor­e, the disaster struck at a time when people’s savings have melted away, and unemployme­nt and poverty have mounted in the financial crisis.

After talks with Lebanese leaders, France’s Macron announced his country will organize a conference in the next few days with European, American, Middle Eastern and other donors to raise money for food, medicine, housing and other urgent aid.

But he warned Lebanon’s political elite that he wouldn’t give “blank checks to a system that no longer has the trust of its people.” He called on them to create a “new political order.”

 ?? Getty Images ?? Emergency workers search a collapsed building for bodies as the official death toll rose to 137.
Getty Images Emergency workers search a collapsed building for bodies as the official death toll rose to 137.

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