BEIRUT (Reuters) – French President Emmanuel Macron called for urgent
support for Lebanon where he arrived on Thursday, two days after a
devastating blast ripped through Beirut, killing 145 people and
generating a seismic shock that was felt across the region.
Dozens
are still missing after Tuesday’s blast at the port that injured 5,000
people and left up to a quarter of a million without homes fit to live
in, hammering a nation already reeling from economic meltdown and a
surge in coronavirus cases.
A security source said the death toll had reached 145, and officials said the figure was likely to rise.
Macron,
making the first visit by a foreign leader since the explosion,
promised to help organise international aid for Lebanon but said its
government must implement economic reforms and crack down on corruption.
“If
these reforms are not made, Lebanon will continue to suffer,” Macron
said after being met by his Lebanese counterpart Michel Aoun at Beirut
airport.
At the port, destroyed by Tuesday’s giant mushroom cloud
and fireball, families gathered seeking news about the missing, amid
public anger at the authorities for allowing highly explosive material
to be stored there for years in unsafe conditions.
“They will
scapegoat somebody to defer responsibility,” said Rabee Azar, a
33-year-old construction worker, speaking near the smashed remains of
the port’s grain silo, surrounded by other mangled masonry and flattened
buildings.
Prime Minister Hassan Diab declared three days of
mourning from Thursday after the most devastating explosion ever to hit
the city that is still scarred by civil war three decades ago.
With banks in crisis, a collapsing currency and one of the world’s
biggest debt burdens, Economy Minister Raoul Nehme said Lebanon had
“very limited” resources to deal with the disaster, which by some
estimates may have cost the nation up to $15 billion. He said the
country needed foreign aid.
DEMANDING REFORM
Offers
of medical and other immediate aid have poured in, as officials have
said hospitals, some heavily damaged in the blast, do not have enough
beds and equipment. But Lebanon was already struggling to secure longer
term, economic support.
The government’s failure to tackle a
runaway budget, mounting debt and endemic corruption has prompted
Western donors to demand reform. Gulf Arab states who once helped
Lebanon have baulked at bailing out a nation they say is increasingly
influenced by their rival Iran.
Lebanon’s president blamed the
explosion on 2,750 tonnes of ammonium nitrate, used in fertilisers and
bombs, that had been stored for six years at the port after it was
seized. He promised to investigate and hold those responsible to
account.
The government ordered some port officials to be put under house arrest.
But
ordinary Lebanese, who have lost jobs and watched savings evaporate in
the financial crisis, blamed politicians in charge during decades of
state corruption and bad governance.
“Our leaders are crooks and
liars. I don’t believe any investigation they will do. They destroyed
the country and they’re still lying to the people. Who are they
kidding?” said Jean Abi Hanna, 80, a retired port worker whose home was
damaged and daughter and granddaughter injured in the blast.
An official source familiar with preliminary investigations blamed
the incident on “inaction and negligence”, saying “nothing was done” to
remove hazardous material.
‘ALL HELL BROKE LOOSE’
Some
local media reported sightings of drones or planes flying in the area
shortly before the explosion and some Beirut residents said they saw
missiles fired. But officials have denied the incident was the result of
any attack.
A Lebanese security source said the initial blaze that sparked the explosion was caused by welding work.
Veteran
politician Walid Jumblatt, leader of Lebanon’s Druze community, called
for an international investigation, saying he had “no trust” in the
government to find out the truth.
The White House said the U.S. government had still not ruled out the possibility that Tuesday’s explosion was an attack.
People
who felt the explosive force said they had witnessed nothing comparable
in years of conflict and upheaval in Beirut, which was devastated by
the 1975-1990 civil war and since then has experienced big bomb attacks,
unrest and a war with Israel.
“First we heard one sound. Seconds
later there was a big explosion. All hell broke loose,” said Ibrahim
Zoobi, who works near the port. “I saw people thrown five or six
metres.”
Seismic tremors from the blast were recorded in Eilat on Israel’s Red Sea coast, about 580 km (360 miles) away.
Beirut Governor Marwan Abboud told Al Hadath TV total losses from
the blast could reach $15 billion, including losses to businesses amid
the broader fallout.
Operations have been paralysed at Beirut
port, Lebanon’s main route for imports needed to feed a nation of more
than 6 million people, forcing ships to divert to smaller ports.
The
World Bank said it would work with Lebanon’s partners to mobilise
financing for reconstruction. But it was unclear whether this would
affect Lebanon’s difficult negotiations with the International Monetary
Fund.
https://www.oann.com/lebanon-mourns-victims-of-devastating-blast-searches-for-missing/