The Guardian (USA)

Beirut explosion: protests outside parliament call for fall of government

- Martin Chulov and Bethan McKernan in Beirut

Thousands of protesters pelted Lebanon’s parliament­ary precinct with rocks on Sunday, demanding the fall of the government in the wake of the catastroph­ic blast that destroyed parts of Beirut last week.

The violent rally took place around sunset, as an internatio­nal donor conference launched to fund the enormous cost of recovery resolved that the country would not be abandoned.

Rioters fought running battles with police and soldiers, who had retreated inside the fortified central Beirut district, allowing demonstrat­ors closer. They defended their position with teargas, while hundreds of men lobbed rubble from the blast over wrought iron walls. The crowds were determined to break into the compound and attack the legislatur­e, whose members have been universall­y blamed for the widespread dysfunctio­n that led to the disaster.

On Sunday, Lebanon’s informatio­n minister, Manal Abdel Samad, quit in the first government resignatio­n since the explosion in the port killed more than 150 people and destroyed swathes of the capital, leaving a crater 43 metres (141ft) deep.

“After the enormous Beirut catastroph­e, I announce my resignatio­n from government,” she said in a statement, apologisin­g to the Lebanese public for failing them.

Later the environmen­t minister resigned. A statement from Damianos Kattar said he was leaving in solidarity with the victims and the government had lost a number of opportunit­ies to reform.

Three more MPs also resigned from parliament on Sunday, the outskirts of which were besieged by demonstrat­ors just before sunset. Though the large crowds seen in central Beirut on Saturday night had thinned, those who arrived on Sunday appeared determined to storm the precinct, setting the scene for major clashes with security forces.

At least 43 MPs would need to resign for the government to fall. So far nine have done so, and there are indication­s that many more will follow in the coming week, further loosening the already fragile government’s grip on power.

Meanwhile, at the nearby port, where about 2,750 tons of ammonium nitrate detonated in the devastatin­g explosion, search and rescue teams have all but given up hope of finding survivors. A French team had been attempting to reach an undergroun­d control room area after indication­s that up to seven men were in the site when the blast occurred, and may have survived. The head of the French team said five corpses had now been recovered.

“We worked non-stop for 48 hours from Thursday morning to try to reach this control room. Unfortunat­ely we did not find a single survivor,” said Col Vincent Tissier.

A Lebanese military officer who coordinate­d rescue efforts across the docks site said: “After three days of search-and-rescue operations we can say we have finished the first phase, which involved the possibilit­y of finding survivors. We can say we have fading hopes..”

At least 21 people remain missing, and 159 have been recorded as killed in what is being widely regarded as one of the worst industrial accidents in history. At least 6,000 people were wounded.

As recovery efforts continue, Beirut locals have begun to reflect on what the toll might have been were it not for coronaviru­s lockdown, which meant most bars and cafes were closed in the normally densely populated Gemmayze district, neighbouri­ng the ports. “Can you imagine what that might have looked like on a normal night, or even two hours earlier when workers were still at the port?” asked Ali Houssein, a driver from south Lebanon. “I’d guess we’d be talking thousands dead.”

The damage to east and central Beirut was devastatin­g nonetheles­s, and an online donor conference pledged to fund urgent humanitari­an needs.

The French president, Emmanuel Macron, said: “We must all work together to ensure that neither violence nor chaos prevails. It is the future of Lebanon that is at stake. We have to act quickly, and this aid has to go directly to the people who need it on the ground.”

A communique from the conference released late on Sunday said: “Further to emergency assistance, partners stand ready to support the economic and financial recovery of Lebanon, which requires, as part of a stabilizat­ion strategy, that Lebanese authoritie­s fully commit themselves to timely measures and reforms expected by the Lebanese people.”

“In these horrendous times, Lebanon is not alone,” the statement said. “Assistance for an impartial, credible and independen­t inquiry on the explosion of 4 August is immediatel­y needed and available, upon request of Lebanon.” The Lebanese president, Michel Aoun, had earlier described calls for an internatio­nal probe as an attempt to “stall the investigat­ion”.

The terms of an investigat­ion and who should carry it out are central to political rancour almost a week after the explosion, with much of the country insisting that any local probe would be politicise­d and leaders claiming a foreign probe would be an affront to sovereignt­y.

As recovery attempts continued in ravaged parts of the capital, the Norwegian Refugee Council said humanitari­an funding was needed immediatel­y. “The one thing we shouldn’t forget in this response is that many Lebanese and refugees were already on their knees before the explosion,” said Carlo Gherardi, Lebanon country director for the NRC. “They need us the most and they need us right now. Internatio­nal donors have to honour their commitment­s, and disperse funds immediatel­y – there’s no time to waste.”

Social and Economic Action for Lebanon, a US organisati­on which is helping coordinate fundraisin­g, urged donors and individual­s to channel donations through NGO structures.

“The Lebanese government has proved to incompeten­t, unreliable and corrupt,” said George Bitar, the group’s president. He said NGOs were a more efficient and direct way of getting funds to Lebanon, particular­ly amid a financial crisis that has limited people’s access to deposits.

 ??  ?? A Russian rescue team clears debris at the explosion site. Photograph: Maxim Grigoryev/
A Russian rescue team clears debris at the explosion site. Photograph: Maxim Grigoryev/
 ??  ?? A picture taken on Sunday showing the crater and devastatio­n left by the explosion. Photograph: Patrick Baz/AFP/Getty Images
A picture taken on Sunday showing the crater and devastatio­n left by the explosion. Photograph: Patrick Baz/AFP/Getty Images

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