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Rescuers search for survivors after the explosions in Beirut. Xinhua News Agency/PA Images

Opinion 'Lebanon needs help - or the consequences for the Middle East don't bear thinking about'

Yesterday’s explosion made a desperate situation worse, writes Bríd Kennedy of Concern.

LEBANON WAS ALREADY at the heart of a triple crisis which threatened the very existence of the state, even before the massive warehouse explosion yesterday which ripped through central Beirut, killing 100 people and injuring almost 4,000.

The country is experiencing its worst economic crisis in recent history, exacerbated by the COVID-19 pandemic. It is also hosting the greatest concentration of refugees per capita in the world.

Yesterday’s explosion means the international community must act immediately to prevent Lebanon’s collapse. Otherwise, the consequences this could have in the currently volatile Middle East region do not bear thinking about.

Lebanon is currently the third most indebted country in the world. Life is difficult for its people with spiralling unemployment, currently running at 35%. Shops and businesses are closing down and power cuts are lasting for up to 20 hours per day. Hospitals, already working to manage COVID cases, are threatened with closure due to a lack of funding.

Over the last nine months the Lebanese pound has lost 80% of its value and plummeted from its fixed exchange rate of 1,500 Lebanese Pounds to the US dollar to 8,000 last week on the black market. The price of basic food staples such as bread are soaring as a result, making them impossible to afford for the average person.

Public frustration flared with mass peaceful protests last October when the government introduced a range of measures to raise revenue including a levy on WhatsApp messages. Financial institutions introduced limits on the withdrawals of savings to stop a run on the banks.

Poverty is widespread in Lebanon, with 45% of the population below the poverty line and the current economic turmoil leaving many previously middle class people scrambling to make ends meet. Remittances sent home by Lebanese abroad have also reduced as a result of the global impact of the COVID pandemic, adding further to the problem.

Like in many other countries, the Lebanese government has imposed lockdowns to control the spread of COVID, with knock-on negative economic impacts.

Lebanon has shown enormous generosity in hosting 1.5 million refugees fleeing the war in neighbouring Syria. In a country the size of Munster one in four of the population is a refugee. This has contributed to over-stretching the already limited public services such as water, sanitation, health and education.

Challenges

Concern has been in Lebanon since 2013 working with refugees in the north of the country, and with the local host populations. The biggest challenge in the last 12 months has been to source funding for this work as Syria currently runs the risk of becoming a neglected crisis.

Our work there includes providing shelter, safe drinking water, latrines and septic tanks, as well as help accessing health and legal services and assistance against gender-based violence. Last year we helped 30,000 people. Funding for this work comes from a variety of major donors including UN agencies, the European Union and Irish Aid.

Yesterday’s explosion made a desperate situation worse. The homes of thousands of people – many already living in poverty — were destroyed by the blast as it tore through the densely populated port area of the capital. The city’s governor estimates it may have left 250,000 people homeless. Given the extensive poverty, many will be unable to afford to rebuild.

Lebanon is largely dependent on imported food to feed its population. The explosion, combined with the economic crisis, has fuelled fears of an impending food crisis. The authorities confirmed yesterday that they had sufficient grain reserves for less than a month.

Concern’s team on the ground are linking with the Lebanese government and other agencies to assess the scale of needs of communities in Beirut. The outcome of that assessment, expected in the coming days, will shape Concern’s emergency response.

Bríd Kennedy is the Middle East regional director for Concern Worldwide, which has been providing humanitarian assistance in Lebanon since 2013. For more details visit the Concern website.

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    Mute Brian Dunne
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    Sep 1st 2020, 8:44 AM

    Looking forward to the brits saying saidhbhín, they cant even sat doherty correctly

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    Mute dmcardle
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    Sep 1st 2020, 8:53 AM

    @Brian Dunne: Lee Mack might have to update his Irish names routine…

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    Mute Peter Cavey
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    Sep 1st 2020, 9:02 AM

    @Brian Dunne: Does anyone know why the British pronounce Doherty as Dockerty? There is clearly no k in the name. Does my head in.

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    Mute Peader O Harlaigh
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    Sep 1st 2020, 9:15 AM

    @Peter Cavey: because they know it annoys us, aul brits up to their old tricks

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    Mute Brian Dunne
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    Sep 1st 2020, 9:22 AM

    @Peter Cavey: McGrath and Moran are two other simple names they can’t master

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    Mute Tom Tom
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    Sep 1st 2020, 9:37 AM

    @Brian Dunne: And Gallagher. They say Gallagurr but yet they can pronounce Callaghan just fine.

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    Mute Madra
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    Sep 1st 2020, 9:45 AM

    @Brian Dunne: how is it pronounced?

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    Mute Tom Tom
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    Sep 1st 2020, 9:54 AM

    @Madra: Sadabadahnnnnnnnnnnnin I think

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    Mute Mary Fitzsimons
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    Sep 1st 2020, 10:02 AM

    @Madra: sive-een

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    Mute Mary Fitzsimons
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    Sep 1st 2020, 10:03 AM

    @Madra: sive-een.

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    Mute Richard Russell
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    Sep 1st 2020, 10:06 AM

    @Brian Dunne: I would have problems with the pronunciation of Saidbhin Sorry about the lack of a fada I don’t know how to type one

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    Mute Shaner Mac
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    Sep 1st 2020, 10:48 AM

    @Brian Dunne: Hope we don’t get as far as S!

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    Mute Brian Ó Dálaigh
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    Sep 1st 2020, 1:55 PM

    @Peter Cavey: yup. It comes from a time when even we pronounced it closer to Dockerty. It’s from Middle Irish Dochartaigh, where the ch is pronounced as in Scottish loch. The English continued to pronounce this k/ch sound, while we in Ireland lost it. Think along the lines of Monaghan (originally Muineachán), Fermanagh (Fear Manach), Gallagher (Gallchobhair) etc. The gh in Monaghan and Fermanagh is now rendered a h or absent in all English dialects, but in some words the original sound has been retained in a much closer approximation in English dialects than in Irish English dialects.

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    Mute Thomas Harrington
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    Sep 1st 2020, 2:10 PM

    @Peter Cavey: Scottish

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    Mute Ken Loughman
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    Sep 1st 2020, 9:37 PM

    @dmcardle: I remember that! I’m still trying to figure out whether I ought to be amused or insulted by that sketch :)

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    Mute Canyon
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    Sep 1st 2020, 9:07 AM

    Diversity for storm names…talk about snowflakes and first world problems..

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    Mute KilkennyProud
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    Sep 1st 2020, 9:18 AM

    @Canyon: People complaining about storm names – first world problems.

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    Mute Ajax Penumbra
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    Sep 1st 2020, 9:32 AM

    @Canyon: Well, we do live in the first world last time I checked…

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    Mute Canyon
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    Sep 1st 2020, 10:03 AM

    @KilkennyProud: in case you missed it…I’m complaining about those wanting diversity in storm names.

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    Mute Ted Logan
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    Sep 1st 2020, 9:32 AM

    They have put the phonetics under Evert, Klaas and Minnie but have left Saidhbhàin to chance. Good luck BBC weather team!

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    Mute Sarah-J. Mc Hugh
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    Sep 1st 2020, 11:18 AM

    @Ted Logan: This is Met Eireann’s graphic for Ireland. I imagine the UK and Dutch met offices will produce their own version with phonetics for the ones that are challenging locally.

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    Mute Goban Saor
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    Sep 1st 2020, 9:39 AM

    I wonder why Saidhbhín and not Saidhbh. I know noone with that name, though I Saidhbh is familiar

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    Mute Caoimhín
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    Sep 1st 2020, 2:59 PM

    @Goban Saor: Do you know many Everts?

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    Mute Ken Loughman
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    Sep 1st 2020, 9:40 PM

    @Goban Saor: It’s just so that we could have more fun messing with some Sky presenters’ heads!

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    Mute Lester Jeffcoat
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    Sep 1st 2020, 9:51 AM

    Congratulations to all the team. No longer will have to point at the weather and shout, ‘I hate that nameless b@stard’.

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    Mute Gerard McAuliffe
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    Sep 1st 2020, 11:42 AM

    Saidhbhín? Picking a random, barely pronounceable name is the way forward I guess.

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    Mute BK
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    Sep 1st 2020, 9:35 AM

    Can imagine the person who added the phonetic spelling getting to Saidhbhin ..” Sai.. …what the F …I give up”

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    Mute Seven Wonders
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    Sep 1st 2020, 10:54 AM

    What happens if there are more storms than names listed about.. 21 there.. will No 22 be called Aiden +1?

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    Mute Gina Carroll
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    Sep 1st 2020, 2:06 PM

    What a load of bl…… seriously picking hardest to say names a poss.

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    Mute Pat Andrews
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    Sep 1st 2020, 3:47 PM

    Wheres Mohammud?

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    Mute Tim Dickson
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    Sep 1st 2020, 11:20 AM

    Naming weather. Whatever!

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    Mute Liz O'Neill
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    Sep 1st 2020, 5:56 PM

    They should have got enough practise trying to pronounce Eyjafjallajökull a few years ago.

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    Mute Marc Esteve
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    Sep 1st 2020, 6:29 PM

    Should not there be a list from time to time and then, once all the names have been used, to get a new list? Most years, the second half of the list does not have any storm (fortunately).

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