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Lebanon is days away from a 'social explosion,' prime minister warns

sammuel

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Lebanon is days away from a 'social explosion,' prime minister warns


BeirutLebanon is days away from a "social explosion" as the country's economic disaster worsens, caretaker Prime Minister Hassan Diab said in a meeting with ambassadors and diplomats on Tuesday, the state news agency NNA reported.
"Lebanon is a few days away from the social explosion. The Lebanese are facing this dark fate alone," Diab said.
Diab appealed for regional and international leaders to help rescue Lebanon from a crisis that has seen the local currency lose 90% of its value and left 77% of households without enough food, according to the United Nations.


Lebanon's population now spend hours in long lines at gas stations trying to buy fuel, as residents struggle with power outages of up to 22 hours a day and severe medical shortages.
"I am calling on kings, princes, presidents and leaders of our friendly countries, and I am calling on the United Nations and all international organizations ... to help rescue Lebanon from its demise," Diab told the ambassadors.



Diab also said only a new cabinet could restart talks with the International Monetary Fund (IMF).
"This government does not have the right to resume negotiations with the IMF to implement the recovery plan set by the cabinet, for this entails obligations on the next government that it may not endorse," he said, according to Reuters.
The European Union's foreign policy chief told Lebanon's leaders last month they were to blame for the political and economic crisis and some could face sanctions if they continue to obstruct steps to form a new government and implement reform.
Diab noted repeated calls for assistance to be linked to reform, but said "the siege imposed" on Lebanon was not affecting the corrupt -- an apparent reference to politicians.
He said Lebanese were running out patience and "linking Lebanon's assistance to the formation of a new government has become a threat to the lives of the Lebanese and to the Lebanese entity."


 
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Trolling
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Iran and Israel destroyed Lebanon. These two barbaric cultures need to be wiped out.

The absence of a strong Arab state/bloc allows this.

The GCC and Egypt are not strong if we look at their might, influence. They don't do anything.

Iraq's Militias now threaten to attack Saudi Arabia. Iran is wanting it but will deny involvement like some rat.
 
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The absence of a strong Arab state/bloc allows this.

The GCC and Egypt are not strong if we look at their might, influence. They don't do anything.

Iraq's Militias now threaten to attack Saudi Arabia. Iran is wanting it but will deny involvement like some rat.

The Arab regimes are not different, have major corruption and hoard resources for their elite clique. GCC has no pro-active policy in the region. They are allowing others to lead. Egypt does but it's only on a local level. Algeria/Morocco/Tunisia are minding their own business, who can blame them? Israel stealing Lebanese gas reserves and Iran trying to dominate corrupt Lebanese gov't and securing investments/deals from Lebanese gov't. This region is going to hit rock bottom and form of government and institutions will be completely overhauled, from top to bottom. Until then, I expect no change.

Did Iraqi militias officially threat Saudi Arabia or was it a rumor? Saudi Arabia wouldn't do anything anyway.
 
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They did. Some small group.

Iran always wanted to spread its cancer in Iraq, it's the reason Saddam was justified to wage war on them

The US should've never enabled Iran to get Iraq, getting the Iranian rat out of Iraq will take a lot of bloodshed now.

People of region are responsible for state it is in today, we don't have control over that. Bringing region out of this state will require bloodshed but it is necessary and inevitable. Most of the bloodshed will not be shed during the 'change' phase, rather the miscalculation and final stage of the ongoing corrupt regimes in the region.
 
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People of region are responsible for state it is in today, we don't have control over that. Bringing region out of this state will require bloodshed but it is necessary and inevitable. Most of the bloodshed will not be shed during the 'change' phase, rather the miscalculation and final stage of the ongoing corrupt regimes in the region.

GCC and Egypt are so worthless on top of that, all those arms and nothing but sleeping.
 
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Lebanon is days away from a 'social explosion,' prime minister warns


BeirutLebanon is days away from a "social explosion" as the country's economic disaster worsens, caretaker Prime Minister Hassan Diab said in a meeting with ambassadors and diplomats on Tuesday, the state news agency NNA reported.
"Lebanon is a few days away from the social explosion. The Lebanese are facing this dark fate alone," Diab said.
Diab appealed for regional and international leaders to help rescue Lebanon from a crisis that has seen the local currency lose 90% of its value and left 77% of households without enough food, according to the United Nations.


Lebanon's population now spend hours in long lines at gas stations trying to buy fuel, as residents struggle with power outages of up to 22 hours a day and severe medical shortages.
"I am calling on kings, princes, presidents and leaders of our friendly countries, and I am calling on the United Nations and all international organizations ... to help rescue Lebanon from its demise," Diab told the ambassadors.



Diab also said only a new cabinet could restart talks with the International Monetary Fund (IMF).
"This government does not have the right to resume negotiations with the IMF to implement the recovery plan set by the cabinet, for this entails obligations on the next government that it may not endorse," he said, according to Reuters.
The European Union's foreign policy chief told Lebanon's leaders last month they were to blame for the political and economic crisis and some could face sanctions if they continue to obstruct steps to form a new government and implement reform.
Diab noted repeated calls for assistance to be linked to reform, but said "the siege imposed" on Lebanon was not affecting the corrupt -- an apparent reference to politicians.
He said Lebanese were running out patience and "linking Lebanon's assistance to the formation of a new government has become a threat to the lives of the Lebanese and to the Lebanese entity."



The result of traitors to Islam, leading the Middle Eastern countries today. Najdis are the ones responsible for not only where Lebanon stands today, but also the creation of the illegal, illegitimate, genocidal state of israel. The day isn't too far when the Muslims will rise up against these najdis and crush them, in-sha-Allah.
 
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Iran and Israel destroyed Lebanon. These two barbaric cultures need to be wiped out.
Israel and the Arabs destroyed Lebanon, as they destroyed, Iraq, Syria, Lybia and Yemen…Iran is protecting itself..that is all…correction : Israeli and the Arabs are barbaric and need to be wiped out…and Israelis learned from the Arabs..
 
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Who is to blame for Lebanon’s crisis?
It is not corruption, nor sectarianism alone. The answer is much more complicated than that.


Almost half of Lebanon’s citizens are projected to sink below the poverty level this year and the government estimates 75 percent of the population will require assistance. The Lebanese economy is now one of the weakest in the world, ranking only above Venezuela, according to a list produced by The Economist. All of this in a matter of months. How?

There always seems to be a simple answer, but it depends on who you ask.

Lebanon’s new prime minister, Hassan Diab, who came to power amid the protests that brought down the previous government, has blamed his predecessors, especially the Central Bank Governor Riad Salameh, an incumbent of 26 years, for the crisis. Diab accuses Salameh of pursuing unsound and untransparent fiscal policies.

The currency devaluation can be partly blamed on the country’s plummeting credit scores, which have been downgraded repeatedly in recent months, due to political turmoil and fears over the government’s ability to repay its mounting public debt, one of the highest in the world.

Diab also claimed that some $5.7bn was taken out of Lebanese banks in January and February of this year, despite capital controls, encouraging a widespread suspicion of foul play and preferential treatment for big investors.


But Governor Salameh rejected the claim, saying that $3.7bn was used for loan payments and $2.2bn was withdrawn mostly in local currency, so it could not have left the country.



Inside a Beirut bank, a security guard wearing a face shield slipped a wooden plank in between the handles of a heavy glass door as a swarm of customers waited outside. “Close the curtains,” a teller ordered him from behind the counter. “We are closed!”

It was barely noon and I was one of the lucky ones to have made it inside after waiting in the parking lot all morning among the throngs of impatient depositors. Two bank employees wearing masks handed out withdrawal forms and had them signed on car hoods. They were heckled by some in the crowd who shouted and shoved, elbowing each other to squeeze through the front doors.

The scene I witnessed was mild compared to those that have unfolded in recent days and months: fistfights and jump kicks worthy of a WWE wrestling match. ATMs have been defaced and destroyed, and during the recent riots, some bank branches were attacked with firebombs, burned and gutted overnight.

It seems the coronavirus pandemic and social distancing have taken a backseat to the worst financial crisis Lebanon has ever seen, and this tiny Mediterranean country has seen many.

The street violence came as Lebanon’s currency had been falling like a rock, losing value every day, experiencing an over 50 percent drop in its purchasing power against the US dollar since last October, when an uprising began, drawing hundreds of thousands into the streets.

The protesters called for the downfall of the government and an end to corruption and demanded living wages, better healthcare, electricity and other essential services they have been denied. Instead, they, and the rest of the population who did not protest, saw their salaries slashed, bank deposits evaporate and the price of basic foodstuffs double.



Looking back, there is much criticism of these neoliberal policies evangelised by the global financial industry, and for good reason. They are top-down, market-driven equations that prioritise investors over workers, profits over social welfare programmes and the environment. But how can these policies explain Lebanon’s unique “mess” if supply-side or “trickle-down” economics have been implemented all over the world?

Could it be that neoliberal policies are far more damaging for small, war-torn countries that lack strong institutions, political stability, natural resources or major manufacturing industries? Such countries are already considered high risk, lack investor confidence and thus pay a high cost for borrowing.

Consider this on the individual level: how hard is it for someone to climb out of bad credit? It is easy to blame their poor decisions and upbringing. It is more difficult to examine the circumstances that led to their misfortune because this necessitates putting one’s own privileges under a microscope.

Like neoliberalism, corruption and cronyism are also not absent from most political and financial systems. But they too have a far greater impact when there is not enough money in the economy to keep people quiet.

Even if we were to dismiss all of the above, this still leaves the favourite scapegoat for Lebanon’s woes: sectarianism.

It is loathed particularly by younger generations, who grew up after the war and are rightly puzzled by its relevance and ability to empower a handful of parties to wield so much control over the state. But here too there are parallels to partisanship, an inescapable reality even in the most successful countries.


After all, it is not really sects or political parties that take decisions at the end of the day, but groups of influential persons at their helm, largely wealthy, largely male, those who sign the big contracts and help write the legislation that guarantees them. In developing countries, it is called clientelism, whereas, in more developed nations, it is known as lobbying, political action committees and excellent legal teams.

This may explain part of the reason why rich countries rank so low on corruption indexes: the language is different.

None of this is to say bad governance and stark wealth disparities should be ignored. But some perspective could help the ways we demand and fight for better systems.

Having spent several years investigating many Lebanese government problems – wasteful public works projects, overpriced telecommunications, unreliable electricity, destructive land use and pollution – I, like many of my colleagues, struggle to identify clear-cut, prosecutable charges of corruption and culprits, ie bad guys and bogeymen.

When we dive into the abyss of public sector failures, what we usually find instead are labyrinths and layers of structural problems that have been mounting for decades. These include outdated, malfunctioning infrastructure, understaffed and underfunded facilities, a lack of maintenance and monitoring.

These problems are further compounded by defunct or non-existent oversight bodies to act as a watchdog on industry and contracts, unclear jurisdiction and conflicting views from different government agencies over who is responsible, slow, ineffective and inaccessible courts.



Of course, this convoluted environment provides many opportunities for exploitation, but more often, this is done through legal loopholes and not the glaring robberies our imaginations can conjure.

Contrary to popular opinion, these are not necessarily problems wedded to personalities that are currently in power. It is not only their annoying mannerisms and snarky smiles that should draw our attention and ire, but hundreds of local and national elected officials and bureaucrats making thousands of decisions on a daily basis, voted in by millions of citizens, many enjoying some benefit from the “ruling class” and its patronage economies.

This discussion of power relations brings us to the final and perhaps most popular argument to explain Lebanon’s financial problems: warlords. Here is another visceral term, like corruption, in which we have become accustomed to depositing our well-justified anger and angst.

But once again, we must ask ourselves how we imagine political structures around the world were established, particularly those most economically powerful and admired today. Is a state not formed through war? By tribes and clans and militias and bloody battles between them?

One difference with Lebanon is that no victor prevailed, the warlords or “the founders” have not given up, the other side has not been conquered to make way for an “indivisible” nation built on the bones of its detractors.

In many ways, Lebanon is unfinished business. It is frozen in the embryonic stage of nation-building, the militias have evolved into parties, but only in name. No system keeps them in check, there is no higher power to adjudicate conflicts and settle jurisdictions, no agreed-upon law enforcement to have a rule of law. Each side can justify its transgressions as part of the ongoing battle.



Cynics will say this void is Lebanon’s fate, destined to be a wasteland, a chessboard where major powers can manoeuvre and manipulate to settle scores without getting their hands (or countries) dirty. The decades of nearly uninterrupted war, from its founding during World War II to the itinerant street battles, air strikes and assassinations of recent years testify to that. No side could have kept up the fight without external support.

Curiously, this militarism from foreign states is rarely included in analyses of corruption in Lebanon. In particular, the billions of dollars in destroyed infrastructure, inflicted upon roads, bridges and power stations over decades of Israeli air strikes using American-made bombs, the untold losses to tourism, shipping and other industries are almost never included in tallies of corruption and economic losses. Lebanon also pays the cost of foreign-funded wars in neighbouring countries, accepting more refugees per capita than any other country in the world, putting an undeniable added strain on already-collapsing employment, services infrastructure.

All of these factors will continue to complicate Lebanon’s options going forward. The new government, consisting largely of unknown individuals and college professors, some of them advisors to political parties, have made some ambitious proposals. On the surface, their tone is more serious than their predecessors’ and they have been more responsive to public demands, arresting business owners accused of price gouging, and demanding a full audit of the central bank’s activities.

But they are being sharply criticised, particularly their bid to ask for billions of dollars in assistance from the IMF and their failure to call for immediate elections and rid the country of corruption more rapidly.

Indeed, the government’s every action should be scrutinised. Renewed demand for accountability and investigations is one positive aspect of the uprising culture the protests have helped inspire.

But analyses that fail to contextualise the daunting, historical, structural and geopolitical challenges even the best possible Lebanese government would face, are telling only part of the story.



Fear, like corruption, stability and creditworthiness are intangible indicators often assessed and determined by those in far more privileged and powerful positions than any politician or bureaucrat in Lebanon. Global institutions help determine the country’s fate but do not share its national interests.

As always, Lebanon will continue to face an uphill battle in attracting foreign capital, perhaps now greater than ever before. Not only are there the concerns about security – a stigma stretching back over 40 years – but also about the solvency of the country’s financial system, which has never faced a challenge of this magnitude even during the height of civil war shelling.

How realistic is it to expect Lebanon to build a competitive industry from an already weakened position with no natural resources, strong central government or significant technical know-how to call upon?

Aside from a few light industries, such as food, jewellery and paper, Lebanon simply does not make much, nor does it have the basic infrastructure to do so in major quantities. Tapping into the country’s abundance of nature and historic sites is also beset by “confidence” concerns, travel warnings from the world’s most powerful nations and deep-set negative perceptions that have kept wondrous ancient and natural sites largely empty. US sanctions, and a ban on direct flights since the civil war, have not helped either.

There is some hope that potential oil production and renewed interest in cannabis growing (long banned under US pressure) could come to the rescue. Neither is anywhere near certain as the fact that new loans will bring renewed borrowing costs, new political strings attached with increasingly difficult and potentially dangerous conditions to meet.

All of these future developments and financial transactions should be followed closely. But in doing so, we should resist the lure of reductive conclusions to create neat paragraphs, easily digestible analyses and tired moralistic stereotypes that appeal to international audiences and publishers. Pointing the finger at localised bad behaviour avoids a more serious conversation about the injustices of global finance.


 
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Insulted Other Member/Nationality
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Keep dreaming Twelver rat, the ones getting wiped out will be the Israeli's and the Farsi facists who brought facism to the region when it never had existed....
You uprooted 6th street dweller we’re the cause of Lebanon destruction.just like herpes you always resurface somewhere..Israel is going to own all your asses..They created Hamas and the remnant of what used to be PLO..You and the Arabs alike are going to made tha slap jars of the world…euhhh.your are already Israel slap jars...for your knowledge, nobody fucks with rats…even rats has a spine to stand on..not like Arabs of your kind..
 
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Lebanon is days away from a 'social explosion,' prime minister warns


BeirutLebanon is days away from a "social explosion" as the country's economic disaster worsens, caretaker Prime Minister Hassan Diab said in a meeting with ambassadors and diplomats on Tuesday, the state news agency NNA reported.
"Lebanon is a few days away from the social explosion. The Lebanese are facing this dark fate alone," Diab said.
Diab appealed for regional and international leaders to help rescue Lebanon from a crisis that has seen the local currency lose 90% of its value and left 77% of households without enough food, according to the United Nations.


Lebanon's population now spend hours in long lines at gas stations trying to buy fuel, as residents struggle with power outages of up to 22 hours a day and severe medical shortages.
"I am calling on kings, princes, presidents and leaders of our friendly countries, and I am calling on the United Nations and all international organizations ... to help rescue Lebanon from its demise," Diab told the ambassadors.



Diab also said only a new cabinet could restart talks with the International Monetary Fund (IMF).
"This government does not have the right to resume negotiations with the IMF to implement the recovery plan set by the cabinet, for this entails obligations on the next government that it may not endorse," he said, according to Reuters.
The European Union's foreign policy chief told Lebanon's leaders last month they were to blame for the political and economic crisis and some could face sanctions if they continue to obstruct steps to form a new government and implement reform.
Diab noted repeated calls for assistance to be linked to reform, but said "the siege imposed" on Lebanon was not affecting the corrupt -- an apparent reference to politicians.
He said Lebanese were running out patience and "linking Lebanon's assistance to the formation of a new government has become a threat to the lives of the Lebanese and to the Lebanese entity."


Lebanon Is unable to sort its issues out. which are not that grim if you compare with let's say pakistan of 2008.
Pakistanis no matter how sad do have a will to fight for their country and survival. Pakistan know the value of the land we live no matter how bad we do with it.
But We Love It.
Labenese have lost that will to fight for thir country.
It Is Very Practical For turkey to take it over. they have cultural similarities. language maybe an issue but, turks maut give them autonomy.
The huge christian minority is as usual leaving the country, on theback of huge western donors and Vatican funding.
TURKey must consider it.
 
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Lebanon Is unable to sort its issues out. which are not that grim if you compare with let's say pakistan of 2008.
Pakistanis no matter how sad do have a will to fight for their country and survival. Pakistan know the value of the land we live no matter how bad we do with it.
But We Love It.
Labenese have lost that will to fight for thir country.
It Is Very Practical For turkey to take it over. they have cultural similarities. language maybe an issue but, turks maut give them autonomy.
The huge christian minority is as usual leaving the country, on theback of huge western donors and Vatican funding.
TURKey must consider it.

Emmmmmmm dafuq
 
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Lebanon Is unable to sort its issues out. which are not that grim if you compare with let's say pakistan of 2008.
Pakistanis no matter how sad do have a will to fight for their country and survival. Pakistan know the value of the land we live no matter how bad we do with it.
But We Love It.
Labenese have lost that will to fight for thir country.
It Is Very Practical For turkey to take it over. they have cultural similarities. language maybe an issue but, turks maut give them autonomy.
The huge christian minority is as usual leaving the country, on theback of huge western donors and Vatican funding.
TURKey must consider it.

When I saw Lebanese soldiers and officers serving tea to Israelis invading them in mid 2000’s I immediately knew this made up garbage of a nation was out the door.
 
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