Blackouts darken misery of Lebanon's economic collapse
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[July 10, 2020] By
Imad Creidi and Ellen Francis
BEIRUT (Reuters) - Samira Hanna spends a
lot of time in the dark. Her old Beirut apartment gets less than two
hours of electricity a day, and with Lebanon's economy in ruins, the
grandmother can barely afford candles, let alone a private generator.
"I sit outside on the stairs for some light," she said. "We don't watch
television. I wait for the electricity to come so I can wash clothes ...
And there's nothing in the fridge, believe me."
Exacerbated by Lebanon's financial meltdown, fuel shortages have
worsened existing power cuts, piling further hardship on Lebanese
struggling with job losses, soaring prices and hunger.
Parts of the capital Beirut now get just a few hours of electricity a
day in the summer heat. Some residents said the blackouts were worse
than during the 1975-1990 civil war.
The energy minister has cited stockpiling as one of several reasons
behind the shortages, with people buying subsidized fuel as a hedge
against inflation.
"Instead of buying gold, people are buying diesel," Raymond Ghajar said
recently.
Smuggling across the border to Syria is also a factor.
Supply has also been interrupted by the fallout of a investigation into
shipments that were not up to specification.
Ghajar said ships carrying fuel started arriving this week and promised
a gradual return to normal - although across Lebanon, normal has meant
daily power cuts of some kind.
Private generator suppliers, who have long filled the supply gap left by
patchy state provision, have also been rationing fuel, and many homes
can no longer pay exorbitant fees.
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Samira Hanna,70, walks in her kitchen as she holds a candle due to a
power cut, in Beirut, Lebanon July 6, 2020. Picture taken July 6,
2020. REUTERS/Mohamed Azakir
Even hospitals have not been spared: the main Beirut public hospital treating
coronavirus cases had to close some operating rooms and turn off air
conditioning in its hallways, local media reported.
And without energy for switchboards, mobile phone coverage was cut in parts of
the country.
Lebanon's power sector, at the heart of the crisis, bleeds up to $2 billion from
public funds every year while failing to supply enough electricity. The heavily
indebted state has long promised to fix it but has not delivered on its pledge.
Hanna, in her 70s, said she never had it this bad. Daily outages have made her
mentally disabled daughter frantic.
The blackouts have stoked resentment towards political leaders who publicly
wrangle over how to repair the sector while power cuts get worse.
"It's about time they have pity on us. But what do they care?" she said. "They
have money and they can live, we can't ... They can see people are suffering,
but they can't feel."
Badiaa, 75, goes without electricity most of the day.
"I wish we had leaders with mercy," she said, bursting into tears. "Everything
they say on TV is lies. They're garbage."
(Writing by Ellen Francis; Editing by Tom Perry and Mike Collett-White
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