Muscat Daily

Lebanon elite unite against blast probe

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Beirut, Lebanon - They may often squabble but Lebanon’s political parties seem united in rejecting an investigat­ion into Beirut’s massive port explosion that they fear could threaten their survival, analysts say.

The explosion of a huge stockpile of poorly stored fertiliser on the dockside on August 4, 2020 killed more than 210 people, wounded thousands and ravaged half the capital.

In the aftermath of mass protests in late 2019 demanding the ouster of the traditiona­l ruling class, many said the disaster was just the latest example of official incompeten­ce and corruption.

But months into a domestic investigat­ion, no one has been held accountabl­e.

Politician­s have repeatedly obstructed the work of judge Tarek Bitar by refusing to show up for questionin­g, filing legal complaints against him or calling for his dismissal, which last week sparked deadly violence in the heart of Beirut.

Analyst Lina Khatib said hopes were fading of holding those responsibl­e for the port blast accountabl­e.

“The ruling class in Lebanon is in agreement about wanting the port probe to be abandoned and they will use all available means to derail it,” said Khatib, director of the Middle East and North Africa programme at the Chatham House thinktank.

The country’s powerful Shiite movement Hezbollah has spearheade­d a campaign to remove Bitar, accusing him of political bias.

The debate over his future, which comes after the previous investigat­or was removed in February, has already triggered the postponeme­nt of one Cabinet meeting despite the urgency of addressing Lebanon’s acute economic crisis.

‘Battle for the rule of law’

Nadim Houry, executive director at the Arab Reform Initiative, said that the whole ruling class felt under threat in what he described as ‘an essential battle in Lebanon for rule of law’.

‘A section of society has decided that they want to go all the way and ask for truth’, but they face ‘a political class that is willing to use threats, use violence, use even launching into another civil war to prevent that quest for truth from leading to a result’, he said.

It emerged after the port blast that officials had known that hundreds of tonnes of ammonium nitrate had for years been left to linger in a warehouse near residentia­l neighbourh­oods.

Families of the victims see in Bitar the only hope for justice in a country where impunity has long been the norm.

After the 1975 to 1990 civil war, Lebanon issued a broad amnesty that benefited the country’s warlords, allowing many of them to become political leaders.

“Regardless of what Bitar finds, it’s the idea itself that any of them can somehow be held accountabl­e that they are resisting,” Houry said.

Any success in the blast probe would set a precedent and unravel a ‘impunity regime’ under which each party agrees not to pursue the other for its crimes, as long as it is not targeted itself.

Tensions came to a boil last week after a rally against Bitar

organised by Hezbollah and its Shiite ally Amal descended into violence that killed seven of their supporters. The sound of gunfire and rocket-propelled grenades trapped residents indoors for hours, reviving memories of the civil war.

Hezbollah accused snipers of the Lebanese Forces, a Christian party, of causing the bloodshed, but the latter has denied this.

The army, meanwhile, is investigat­ing a video circulated on social media that appears to show a soldier shooting at protesters.

While political parties have publicly supported an investigat­ion, analysts say they ultimately wish to protect their own interests.

“Lebanon’s ruling class may be political opponents but they are united in profiteeri­ng from the system... and they therefore oppose any steps to reform it or to instil accountabi­lity within it,” Khatib said.

A spokesman for the families of blast victims quit on Saturday, after many feared he had been intimidate­d into toeing the Hezbollah line and calling for Bitar to step down.

Ibrahim Hoteit, who lost his brother in the explosion, lives in a Shiite-majority neighbourh­ood.

The following day, many refrained from taking part in a protest to mark the second anniversar­y of the now-defunct 2019 protest movement, fearing further violence.

“Ultimately, the ruling class want to push the Lebanese to conclude that the price of accountabi­lity is too high,” Khatib said.

The ruling class in Lebanon is in agreement about wanting the port probe to be abandoned and they will use all available means to derail it

LINA KHATIB

 ?? (AFP) ?? Protesters gather in front of the ‘Revolution fist’, symbol of Lebanon’s October 2019 uprising, during a rally in the capital Beirut on Sunday
(AFP) Protesters gather in front of the ‘Revolution fist’, symbol of Lebanon’s October 2019 uprising, during a rally in the capital Beirut on Sunday

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