Lebanon hires firm to clear dangerous material from shattered Beirut
port
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[November 20, 2020]
BEIRUT (Reuters) - Lebanon's
authorities signed a contract this month with a German company to clear
dangerous material stored for more than a decade at Beirut port, the
site of a seismic blast in August that killed about 200 people and
wrecked swathes of the capital.
Combi Lift, which signed the contract three months after a huge quantity
of poorly stored chemicals erupted in a mushroom cloud, will remove
"flammable and highly reactive" chemicals from 49 containers at the
port, the caretaker prime minister's office said in a statement sent to
Reuters.
At least some of the chemicals the German firm will remove had been in
storage at the port since 2009, although the statement did not give
precise details.
The fact that it took about three months since the blast to sign a deal
to remove dangerous material still left at the shattered port, which
lies in the heart of Beirut, will add to public frustration and a sense
of political drift in a nation whose economy has imploded after years of
mismanagement and corruption.
Many Lebanese, particularly those who lost homes or who are still
working on repairs since the Aug. 4 blast, are angry that results of an
investigation have yet to be released.
"One hundred days after the national tragedy of the Beirut port
explosion, one hundred days of investigation engaging serious
international expertise and still no clarity, no accountability, no
justice," U.N. special coordinator for Lebanon, Jan Kubis, tweeted on
Nov. 13.
He briefed the U.N. Security Council about Lebanon, citing a lack of
clarity about the probe despite "numerous appeals and petitions of
citizenry" for an impartial investigation.
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A view shows damage at the site of a massive explosion in Beirut's
port area, as part of the city's skyline in seen in the background,
in Beirut, Lebanon August 12, 2020. REUTERS/Alkis Konstantinidis/File
Photo
The cabinet quit after the blast but is still acting in a caretaker
role, as Lebanon's top politicians, many of whom have been in and
out of power for decades under a sectarian power-sharing system,
have yet to agree on forming a new government.
The state news agency had said on Wednesday a contract with Combi
Lift was signed. It did not give the details that were later
provided to Reuters.
The ammonium nitrate that exploded in August had been unloaded at
the port in 2014. The authorities ignored several warnings by
officials about the dangers of storing the material there.
The authorities have detained 25 people, including port and customs
officials, and say the probe is moving as fast as possible.
(Reporting by Beirut bureau; Writing by Ghaida Ghantous; Editing by
Edmund Blair)
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