Lebanon’s plea to expats: The airport is open again, come visit, bring dollars

About 400,000 work in the Gulf states alone. (Shutterstock)
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Updated 02 July 2020
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Lebanon’s plea to expats: The airport is open again, come visit, bring dollars

  • Diaspora is skeptical and increasingly unwilling to send cash to troubled country

BEIRUT: As Beirut’s airport reopened on Wednesday after a four-month virus shutdown, Lebanese expatriates were urged to come home for the summer — and bring dollars.
The Lebanese pound has lost 80 percent of its value this year, plunging to nearly 9,000 to the US dollar on the black market compared with the official rate of 1,507. Food prices have soared, businesses have closed, salaries and savings disappear fast and unemployment has surged.
The country desperately needs hard currency, and Prime Minister Hassan Diab knows where he can find it. “Travelers are allowed to bring as many dollars as they want, and no one will prevent them,” he told a Cabinet meeting on Wednesday. “We invite Lebanese expatriates who will come to Lebanon to carry dollars with them to help their families and communities.”
The Lebanese diaspora is thought to be about three times the size of Lebanon’s 5 million population, and there are thriving Lebanese communities throughout the world.
About 400,000 work in the Gulf states alone. Visits home are a summer tradition, and many send home cash remittances every month. Now, some Lebanese expats are considering cutting ties with a country they say is corrupt and has robbed them of a future.
“If you’re a Lebanese considering visiting this summer, you will think about bringing only what you need to spend while there, not a single penny more,” said Hasan Fadlallah, who has lived in Dubai since 1997 and runs a brand consultancy.
“I doubt anyone is thinking about investing in the economy, especially when you know the recipient is not worthy of this help.”
Elie Fares, a Lebanese doctor in Philadelphia in the US, said: “I am definitely not handing my hard-earned money to our corrupt government on a silver platter so they can perpetuate their corruption.”
Inside Lebanon, already impoverished areas are the worst affected by the collapsing economy. “Tripoli is suffering from a catastrophic social reality, we are sitting on a volcano that could explode at any time,” said Omar Hallab of the Lebanese Association of Industrialists.
“In the north, 28,000 businesses are heading for closure, including 10,000 in Tripoli, which will throw 60,000 employees on the street.
“The challenges are becoming more significant than we can afford, poverty will expand to new neighborhoods and the revolution will intensify while politicians sit on their chairs with only theories and no solutions.”

 


PIF-backed Humain secures up to $1.2bn to expand AI infrastructure 

Updated 7 sec ago
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PIF-backed Humain secures up to $1.2bn to expand AI infrastructure 

RIYADH: Saudi Arabia’s National Infrastructure Fund and Humain, an artificial intelligence company backed by the Public Investment Fund, have agreed on a financing framework worth up to $1.2 billion to expand AI and digital infrastructure in the Kingdom. 

The non-binding agreement, announced on the sidelines of the World Economic Forum annual meeting in Davos, sets out financing terms to develop as much as 250 megawatts of AI data center capacity to serve Humain’s local, regional and global customers, according to a statement. 

The development aligns with Saudi Arabia’s Vision 2030 program, which aims to position the Kingdom as a regional technology hub by the end of the decade. 

Tareq Amin, CEO of Humain, said: “Demand growth for advanced compute is intensifying, and this Framework Agreement positions Humain to respond with speed and scale.” 

He added: “In partnership with Infra, our goal is to deliver world-class AI data center infrastructure that enterprises can rely on as their compute needs grow more complex.”

Under the deal, Infra and Humain have also agreed to explore the establishment of an AI data center investment platform. 

This would be anchored by the two organizations and structured to facilitate participation by global and local institutional investors to support further scaling of Humain’s AI strategy. 

Esmail Alsallom, CEO of Infra, said that the framework agreement is an important step in expanding Infra’s role of unlocking infrastructure investment opportunities in the Kingdom. 

He added: “Our partnership with Humain will activate new pathways to grow institutional investment and develop the digital economy through enabling AI infrastructure.” 

Humain has stepped up activity in recent months as Saudi Arabia moves to secure capacity to support artificial intelligence workloads.

In December, the company awarded Al Moammar Information Systems Co. a contract to design and build a data center dedicated to AI technologies. 

It has also partnered with Saudi Telecom Co. to establish a joint venture to develop and operate AI-focused data centers in the Kingdom. 

According to a Tadawul filing, Humain will hold a 51 percent stake in the joint venture, while stc will own the remaining 49 percent. The data center will be developed through stc’s subsidiary Digital Data and Communications Centers, also known as center3. 

The facility will feature advanced infrastructure capable of supporting up to 1 gigawatt of power, starting with an initial capacity of 250 MW, subject to customer demand.