Home farming takes root in Lebanon amid shortages

Rising prices and concerns about food security have encouraged people in Lebanon to go back to their farming roots. (AFP)
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Updated 11 June 2020
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Home farming takes root in Lebanon amid shortages

  • Staple food prices have gone up recently, with the cost of rice rising by 41 percent and sugar by 50 percent between September and February

AMMAN: As Lebanon’s coronavirus lockdown puts further strain on its already shrinking workforce and compounds dire food shortages, insurance specialist Fares Mdawar has invested his free time into converting the patch of land by his home into a farm.

In the mountainous district of Keserwan, north of the capital Beirut, about 400 families have joined Mdawar, 62, to grow vegetables and other produce under a new initiative to promote home agriculture and self-sufficiency.

“I’m from the mountains and my family farmed their entire lives, but we no longer farm,” said Mdawar, one of the beneficiaries of the Ghaletna project, which since March has been giving families seedlings, training and other resources.

“It’s not my profession, but I have this land and because of circumstances caused by coronavirus and job scarcity, we got excited about this project.”

The initiative, which means “our crop” in Arabic, was founded in in March by university professor and former social affairs minister Selim Sayegh, and receives a mix of public and private funding.

With lockdowns to slow the spread of COVID-19 closing borders and stalling transportation networks around the world, people in import-dependent cities are turning to urban farming as they realize how easily their food supplies can be disrupted.

As inflation and unemployment soar in Lebanon — where food accounts for nearly a fifth of total imports, according to data from the World Bank — the movement to promote home-based farming has been gaining popularity.

Oscar-nominated Lebanese filmmaker Nadine Labaki also joined the call to grow-your-own. In May, she launched the “Plant of my Heart” campaign, bringing together several sustainable agriculture initiatives to help prospective home farmers.

By the time the novel coronavirus reached Lebanon in March, a financial crisis exacerbated by months of political instability had already taken a toll on the country of about 7 million people.

More than 220,000 jobs were lost between October and February, according to research firm InfoPro.

Staple food prices have gone up in recent months, with the cost of rice rising by 41 percent and sugar by 50 percent between September and February. As a result, poverty is affecting nearly everyone, said Sayegh of Ghaletna.

“There’s an issue of food security — communities are largely lacking resources that have become more expensive than the Lebanese people can afford,” he told the Thomson Reuters Foundation in a phone interview. 

“We want to connect people to their land again and motivate them.”

Traditionally, homeowners from previous generations would build multi-level farming basins in small, often steep, plots of land adjacent to their houses, but as a consumer economy flourished, people stopped farming, Sayegh said.

Using its network of about 80 volunteers, Ghaletna reached out to more than 70 villages across Keserwan to recruit families for its pilot project.

In his family’s 50-square-meter (538-square-foot) plot, electrical engineering graduate Joe Daccache, 22, is growing parsley, rocket, zucchini and cucumbers.

“At this point, we’re producing enough just for the household,” said Daccache, who lives with his family of five.

The real value will come from conserving or freezing portions of his harvest to use out of season, when items in the market can cost up to three times their original price, he said.

Sayegh has future plans to expand the project if the results of the pilot are promising.

People have even reached out to Ghaletna offering their land for free to be farmed so that its yield can be distributed to families in need, he said.

As Lebanon eases restrictions and re-opens businesses, there’s a risk people might not have the same time to tend to their land, said Daccache.

But he expects as more people lose their jobs in the long term, they’ll have to turn to more self-sufficient practices like home farming.

“We’re now opening our eyes to the large amount of consumption we had been relying on without thinking of sustainability for the future,” he said.


Airports in GCC are turning stopovers into tourism growth

Updated 14 February 2026
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Airports in GCC are turning stopovers into tourism growth

  • Governments and airport operators are turning aviation as a central pillar of tourism and economic strategy

CAIRO: Once defined by fleeting layovers and duty-free corridors, airports across the Gulf Cooperation Council are increasingly gateways to short-stay tourism, driving non-oil growth, hospitality revenues and job creation. 

Across the region, governments, airlines and airport operators are treating aviation not merely as a transport sector but as a central pillar of tourism and economic strategy. Through streamlined visa regimes, airline-led stopover programs and sustained investment in airport infrastructure and technology, GCC countries are turning transit passengers into visitors. 

“Across the GCC, destinations have shifted from functioning primarily as global transit hubs to positioning themselves as places travelers actively choose to visit, even for short stays during onward journeys,” Nicholas Nahas, partner at Arthur D. Little, told Arab News. 

Airports in the Middle East are investing heavily in biometric processing systems, e-gates and digital border controls designed to shorten waiting times and improve passenger flow. These upgrades, backed by coordinated public-private initiatives, are narrowing the gap between arrival and exploration, making short stays viable even for passengers transiting for less than 48 hours. 

Unified GCC visa 

Two years after its initial proposal, the long-discussed unified GCC tourist visa is moving through final coordination stages, a development expected to further accelerate tourism spending linked to stopovers. 

Looking ahead, the visa could allow the region to function as a single tourism corridor. Robert Coulson, executive adviser for real estate at Accenture, said the next phase is about regional continuity. “The next leap for the GCC is making the region feel like one seamless journey while differentiating each stop with a distinct identity,” he told Arab News. 

First proposed in 2023 and approved in principle in 2024, the visa is designed to allow travel across Bahrain, Kuwait, Oman, Qatar, Saudi Arabia and the UAE under a single permit. Analysts say Saudi Arabia is positioned to be among the biggest beneficiaries, given its scale, expanding destination portfolio and growing aviation capacity. 

The unified visa is expected to complement existing stopover initiatives by allowing travelers to combine short visits to Saudi Arabia with trips to Dubai or Doha, effectively turning the Gulf into a single multi-country itinerary rather than a series of isolated transit points. 

Saudi aviation surge 

Saudi Arabia’s aviation-driven tourism growth has accelerated rapidly. The Kingdom welcomed an estimated 122 million visitors in 2025, moving closer to its Vision 2030 target of attracting 150 million tourists annually. 

“GCC travel hubs have stopped selling connections and started selling experiences,” Coulson said. “They’ve cracked the stopover-to-stayover model, turning a layover into a mini-holiday rather than dead time.” 

In January, Abdulaziz Al-Duailej, president of the General Authority of Civil Aviation, said international destinations served from Saudi Arabia increased to 176 in 2025, while the Kingdom remained home to some of the world’s busiest air routes. 

He credited this performance to the “unlimited support” of the Kingdom’s leadership, identifying aviation as a key enabler of Vision 2030 and broader economic diversification. 

Saudi Arabia’s newest airline, Riyadh Air, is expected to contribute more than $20 billion to non-oil gross domestic product and create over 200,000 direct and indirect jobs, underscoring aviation’s expanding economic footprint. 

A key pillar of Saudi Arabia’s strategy has been the introduction of a digital stopover visa in 2023, allowing transit passengers to enter the Kingdom for up to 96 hours. The initiative enables short visits for Umrah, trips to Madinah or exploration of the country’s cultural and historical sites.  The policy reflects a broader regional effort to turn time spent between flights into economic activity beyond the airport terminal, particularly in hospitality, transport and cultural tourism. 

Short-stay shift 

This evolution has been driven by global connectivity, simplified visa access and the ability to deliver high-quality experiences within a 24-to-72-hour window. The UAE, particularly Dubai, was the earliest and most established example of this transition, converting a growing share of its transit traffic into visitors through airline-led stopover packages, flexible visa categories and dense, short-stay-friendly attractions. 

Dubai International Airport handles more than 85 million passengers annually. Curated stopover products combining hotel stays with cultural and entertainment experiences have helped transform transit traffic into leisure demand. Direct metro access and streamlined entry processes have further reduced friction. As a result, Dubai welcomed around 19 million international overnight visitors in 2025. 

Other GCC destinations have since adopted similar models. Abu Dhabi expanded stopover offerings through its national carrier, promoting entertainment and cultural districts as compelling short-stay experiences. Qatar embedded stopover tourism into its national tourism strategy, converting transfer traffic at Hamad International Airport into city stays. Saudi Arabia expanded its tourism offering through its 96-hour digital visa linked to onward flights. 

A smooth transit experience is often the deciding factor in whether passengers remain airside or choose to explore. Fast entry processes, intuitive airport design and reliable airport-to-city connectivity can turn even a six- to eight-hour layover into usable time rather than idle waiting. 

Under Vision 2030, Saudi Arabia has invested heavily in airport expansion, digital border processes and urban mobility projects designed to shorten the distance between arrival and experience. Airline stopover platforms, transport apps and airport-based destination messaging increasingly reduce uncertainty and enable spontaneous exploration. 

Beyond transit traffic, Nahas said tourism growth across the GCC has been driven by integrated destination ecosystems. Successful destinations are designed end-to-end — from trip planning and arrival through accommodation, mobility, experiences and departure — requiring coordination across tourism authorities, airlines, airports, transport providers and experience operators. 

Designing destinations 

For developers shaping the region’s next phase of tourism growth, the focus has shifted toward creating destinations that capture travelers from the moment they arrive. 

Sultan Moraished, group head of technology and corporate excellence at Red Sea Global, said next-generation destinations are being designed to resonate with global travelers beyond a flight connection. 

“As we design and build next-generation destinations, our focus is always on creating experiences that resonate with global travelers from the moment they arrive to when they choose to explore beyond a flight connection,” he told Arab News. 

Moraished said offering experiences travelers cannot find elsewhere, from cultural immersion to nature-based activities, creates compelling reasons to extend visits beyond simple transit. He added that collaboration across aviation, hospitality and destination authorities ensures that every part of the journey is aligned with a shared vision for tourism growth. 

Looking ahead, Moraished said the intersection of innovation and hospitality will continue to open new pathways, from smart digital experiences to regenerative tourism practices that appeal to increasingly conscious travelers and encourage repeat visitation. 

Experience economy 

Airports have shifted from being standalone infrastructure assets to functioning as world-class distribution engines for cities and destinations. Investments in gateway airports have made them part of the destination brand promise. 

Tourism operates as a continuous conversion funnel, Coulson said. Every step removed between the flight gate and the city increases the likelihood that travelers will leave the terminal and spend money locally. Fast connections, predictable baggage handling and clear wayfinding reduce perceived risk, while simplified transit visas make spontaneity possible. 

A unified GCC tourist visa could unlock longer stays and multi-country itineraries, supported by investment in walkable districts, waterfronts and climate-smart design. 

Taken together, the transformation of transit hubs into tourism powerhouses reflects a broader shift in how the Gulf approaches aviation-led growth. Airports are no longer just points of passage but economic gateways where short stopovers translate into tourism spending, jobs and long-term diversification.