Huge Blaze at Beirut Port Alarms Residents A Month After Massive Blast

You might also like

Download as pdf or txt
Download as pdf or txt
You are on page 1of 2

Huge blaze at Beirut port alarms

residents a month after massive blast


Tom Perry, Alaa Kanaan

3 Min Read


BEIRUT (Reuters) - A large fire erupted at Beirut port on Thursday, sending a huge
column of smoke over the Lebanese capital weeks after a massive blast devastated the
port and surrounding residential area.

The blaze began in the shattered duty free zone of the port, prompting some residents
to flee the city still traumatised by last month’s explosion which followed a port fire.

“For sure we were scared, it’s only been a month since the explosion that destroyed
Beirut. We saw the same thing happening again,” 53-year-old Andre Muarbes said as
some districts of the capital were shrouded by a cloud of black smoke.

A military source said early indications suggested the blaze started when cooking oil in the
port area caught fire and spread to stores of tyres. At one point, live television footage
showed flames licking up near a pile of tires in a smashed warehouse.

Army helicopters dropped water on the fire, as firefighters battled the blaze on the ground.

There were no immediate reports of injuries but the blaze strained nerves already on edge
in a nation grappling with a deep economic crisis that has posed the biggest threat to
Lebanon’s stability since its 1975-1990 civil war.

The Aug. 4 blast killed about 190 people and injured 6,000.

Majed Hassanein, 49, was taking his wife and two children out of the city by car. “I am
forced to get them out of Beirut from the smoke and the fire that is happening at the port
again,” he said.

His son, he said, was still suffering shock from the blast that ruined a swathe of capital near
the port, leaving about 300,000 people without inhabitable homes and shattering windows
across the city.

The head of Lebanon’s Red Cross, George Kettaneh, said there was no fear of another
explosion as a result of Thursday’s fire and there were no injuries, although he said there
were some people suffering from shortness of breath.

Slideshow (5 Images)
The public prosecutor ordered an immediate investigation into the blaze. Many Lebanese
are frustrated that they have not been told about any initial findings from an investigation
into the port blast, more than a month after it ripped through Beirut.

Carmen Geha, an activist and associate professor at the American University of Beirut, said
the fire was further proof of mismanagement by a ruling elite, who have dragged the nation
into crisis after years of corruption and poor governance.

“It’s a gross crime, gross negligence and gross arrogance,” she said. “You can’t trust them to
manage anything.”

You might also like