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EDITOR IN CHIEF- ABDULLAH BIN SALIM AL SHUEILI

Civil war survivors say today’s crisis even worse

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Layal Abou Rahal


During the civil war that ended over 30 years ago Abla Barotta survived shelling and clashes, but she now fears a “slow death” from Lebanon’s worst economic crisis in decades.


The 58-year-old mother of three is a survivor among the more than 50 per cent of Lebanese today living in poverty. Echoing a common refrain on television and at public gatherings, Barotta said even the worst days of the war weren’t this tough.


“We used to hide in houses or basements every time we heard shelling during the war, but today, where can we go to hide from hunger, the economic crisis, the coronavirus pandemic and our political leaders?” she said.


“We used to fear death from bombardment or sniper fire, but now we fear everything: illness, poverty and hunger,” she said. Her voice lowering to a whisper, she added: “To die from shelling is better, at least there is no suffering... while today, we suffer and die slowly every day.”


Lebanon on Tuesday marks 46 years since clashes erupted in Beirut, marking the start of a 15-year conflict that drew in regional powers. At the time, the country was divided into warring sectarian fiefdoms.


But many still managed to preserve a semblance of normal life between bouts of heightened violence and kidnappings. The wheels of Lebanon’s economy kept turning, bolstered by money and weapons sent to warring parties from abroad.


Corruption, negligence and bitter political divisions, however, have plagued Lebanon in the run-up to a financial slump now sounding the death knell for a fragile middle class.


Since 2019, the Lebanese pound has lost more than 85 per cent of its value against the dollar on the black market and prices have soared. Customers have come to blows in supermarkets to secure fast-selling subsidised products, while shortages in pharmacies have made medicine shopping akin to hunting for treasure.


Despite the deterioration, authorities have done little to stem a crisis compounded by the Covid-19 pandemic and last year’s port blast that cost more than 200 lives and ravaged swathes of Beirut.


“The war was ugly... but we never lived through anything like this economic crisis,” Barotta said in her Beirut home that was hard hit by the August 4 explosion. — AFP


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