From News Nation:
“Mired in crises, Lebanon
marks 1 year since horrific blast”
Banks, businesses and government
offices were shuttered Wednesday as Lebanon marks one year since the horrific
explosion at the port of Beirut with a national day of mourning. The grim
anniversary comes amid an unprecedented economic and financial meltdown, and a
political stalemate that has kept the country without a functioning government
for a full year. United in grief and anger, families of the victims and other
Lebanese were planning prayers and protests later in the day. The explosion
killed at least 214 people, according to official records, and injured
thousands.
The blast was one of the largest
non-nuclear explosions in history — the result of hundreds of tons of ammonium
nitrate igniting after a fire broke out. The explosion tore through the city
with such force it caused a tremor across the entire country that was heard and
felt as far away as the Mediterranean island of Cyprus more than 180 miles
away. It soon emerged in documents that the highly combustible nitrates had
been haphazardly stored at the port since 2014 and that multiple high-level
officials over the years knew of their presence and did nothing. A year later,
there has been no accountability, and the investigation has yet to answer
questions such as who ordered the shipment of the chemicals and why officials
ignored repeated internal warnings of their danger.
Families of the victims planned a
memorial and prayers at the still-wrecked site of the blast at Beirut port
later in the day. Mass protests were also expected. A huge metal gavel with the
words “Act for Justice” was placed on a wall opposite the port with its
shredded grain silos, near the words “My government did this” scrawled in
black. Flags flew at half-staff over government institutions and embassies and
even medical labs and COVID-19 vaccination centers were closed to mark the day.
Reflecting the raw anger at the country’s ruling class, posters were hung on
the facade of defaced buildings across from the port. “Here starts your end and
our beginning,” read one poster that took up the space of five floors of a
high-rise. “Hostages of a murderous state,” read another.
In an extensive investigative
report about the blast, Human Rights Watch on Tuesday called for an international
probe into the port blast, accusing Lebanese authorities of trying to thwart
the investigation. HRW said a lack of judicial independence,
constitution-imposed immunity for high-level officials and a range of
procedural and systemic flaws in the domestic investigation rendered it
“incapable of credibly delivering justice.” The explosion – which destroyed and
damaged thousands of homes and businesses – and the lack of accountability,
have added to tensions and anguish in a country reeling from multiple other
crises, including an economic unraveling so severe it has been described by the
World Bank as one of the worst in the last 150 years. The crisis has led to a
dramatic currency crash and hyperinflation, plunging more than half the
country’s population below the poverty line.
^ This is a grim anniversary for
Lebanon and doesn’t seem to have changed much for the better for the people
there. ^
https://www.newsnationnow.com/world/mired-in-crises-lebanon-marks-1-year-since-horrific-blast/
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