Babies found dumped as Lebanese grapple with poverty

A general view of the centre of Lebanon's capital Beirut. (AFP file photo)
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Updated 03 September 2021
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Babies found dumped as Lebanese grapple with poverty

  • Country has reached starvation stage, says ex-minister

BEIRUT: Two babies have been found dumped in Lebanon in less than a week.

On Aug. 27, cleaners found a baby girl inside a garbage bag that was in a waste container under the Burj Hammoud Bridge, a popular mixed area with an Armenian majority where many underprivileged families live.

Then, on Sept. 1, a worker at Al-Bahr Mosque in the southern city of Sidon found a baby boy on the stairs of the building’s entrance. The baby was just a few months old and in poor health.

This terrifying social phenomenon is new to Lebanese society.

Lebanon experienced something similar over three decades ago during the civil war, and such incidents occurred intermittently after the conflict ended.

Security and judicial authorities usually follow up on these cases, often placing the abandoned babies in social welfare institutions.

In July a UNICEF report on Lebanon warned that over 30 percent of children were “going to bed hungry” and had skipped meals in the past month.

“Seventy-seven percent of households do not have enough food or enough money to buy food. Sixty percent of households have to buy food on credit or borrow money. Thirty percent of children are not receiving the primary health care they need,” it said.

The national currency has lost about 99 percent of its value in less than two years and around 55 percent of the population now lives below the poverty line as a result of an economic crisis.

Inflation is expected to increase, with the anticipation of a greater decline in the value of the Lebanese pound if the country’s political turmoil persists.

The international community requires the formation of a government that implements economic and financial reforms as a precondition for aid.

Khaled Qabbani, a former minister of justice and education and the director general of Social Welfare Institutions and the Islamic Orphanage in Lebanon, said he expected “the worst amid this economic, financial, political and moral collapse.”

“When people starve and institutions collapse and Lebanon loses the confidence of the international community while the political class is distracted by quotas and personal gains, we will see more children in the streets and more theft and looting,” he told Arab News. “Chaos is bound to prevail. Since the ruling authority and the security forces lost their stature, no one can prevent riots. We are currently in the midst of this stage and the phenomenon of leaving babies in the garbage and on the doors of mosques indicates this complete collapse.

“A high percentage of parents want to enroll their children in the orphanage because they are unable to provide them with care and protection. They know that we protect our children and provide them with education, a place to sleep, food and hospitalization. They would rather be separated from their children and place them in our care than keep them at home without food or education. The phenomenon of parents leaving their children is a product of poverty and a lack of moral values.

“Parents who enroll their children in our institutions have to come and take their children home weekly in order to maintain a family connection. However, parents have recently stopped coming to the orphanage due to the high cost of transportation, especially if they live in areas far from Beirut.”

The economic crisis has hit all institutions that provide social care within their sects. “Social welfare institutions had never experienced such conditions and risks, even in the most difficult stages of Lebanon’s history,” he added. “The country has reached the stage of starvation, people did not starve during the war.

“Our expenses increased and our sources of income decreased. The donors were affected by the crisis as well, so the size of donations dropped. The middle class, which is considered the backbone of society and which sympathizes greatly with its social welfare institutions, was also dramatically affected by the crisis. Remarkably, the people’s sympathy for us did not cease. On the contrary, the sense of responsibility rose and the donations never stopped. This means that society has not lost its social and patriotic sense.”

Qabbani said that many social welfare institutions in Lebanon faced the same predicament. Some had reduced their services, dismissed employees, or cut their salaries.

“All the Lebanese share the same plight and poverty has spread to all sects.”


Lebanese army sets up checkpoints to implement ban on Hezbollah military activity

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Lebanese army sets up checkpoints to implement ban on Hezbollah military activity

  • Military checkpoints focused on vehicles traveling south as tens of thousands of residents were simultaneously fleeing in the opposite direction toward Beirut
  • Justice minister tells Arab News: State does not belong to one group over another; we are course-correcting

BEIRUT: The Lebanese army on Tuesday set up inspection checkpoints on the highway leading from Beirut to southern Lebanon, particularly in the Zahrani area toward Nabatieh and Tyre, in implementation of the government’s recent decisions to ban Hezbollah’s military activity.

The military checkpoints focused on vehicles traveling south as tens of thousands of residents were simultaneously fleeing in the opposite direction toward Beirut after the Israeli army issued evacuation warnings to civilians in dozens of villages south and north of the Litani River.

At the army positions, security personnel checked identification documents, searched vehicles for weapons and questioned drivers about the purpose of their travel to the south.

The measures mark an unprecedented scene in Lebanon over the past four decades. Since the end of the civil war, Hezbollah has retained its arsenal under the banner of “resistance,” unlike other militias that disarmed under the 1989 Taif Agreement and subsequent international resolutions.

A judicial source told Arab News that the Lebanese army checkpoints are tasked with searching for those carrying weapons and launching rockets, and arresting all armed individuals, but added that “so far no one has been arrested.”

Minister of Justice Adel Nassar told Arab News: “The government was clear in its decisions and their implementation against those who violate the law. Hezbollah is the product of 40 years of accumulation, and today we are course-correcting.”

Nassar reflected on the government’s efforts to restrict weapons to state control during the year following the November 2024 ceasefire agreement between Lebanon and Israel.

“We waited for a response to the state, which is not for one group at the expense of another, but rather a guardian for all people. There were attempts to push toward engagement in the state project instead of engagement with external parties, and we have now reached this point,” he told Arab News.

Hezbollah had responded to the government’s decisions on Monday night by issuing a statement signed by MP Mohammad Raad, whose death in an Israeli strike at dawn on Monday had been rumored, describing them as “decisions against the Lebanese.”

Following its rejection of the decisions, Hezbollah launched more rockets at the Upper Galilee, claiming responsibility in statements issued under the banner of defending the south. On Tuesday, the militant group launched rockets toward Israeli bases and struck Israeli tanks that had advanced into Lebanese territory.

The militant group accused the government of “having been incapable of making decisions on war and peace and imposing them on the enemy that violates national peace, and persists in its aggressive war against Lebanon and its people.”

Nassar added that arrest warrants for those who launched rockets have entered into force and investigations are underway.

“There is more than one matter being pursued to identify those responsible,” he told Arab News, without disclosing details.

On Tuesday, President Joseph Aoun told members of the Quintet Committee at the Presidential Palace that the decision to reserve for the Lebanese state alone the exclusive authority over war and peace, and to ban all military and unlawful security activity outside its authority, “is a sovereign and irreversible one.”

He added: “The cabinet has tasked the army and security forces with implementing this decision across all Lebanese territory, stressing that the state alone has the sole right to decide on war and peace.”

An official source told Arab News that the president and prime minister remain in contact with world leaders and key stakeholders, and are urging an end to the Israeli war on Lebanon.

According to the Lebanese Presidency’s media office, French President Emmanuel Macron highlighted his country’s “unwavering support for Lebanon,” adding that the cabinet’s decisions reinforce the Lebanese state’s sovereignty across its territory and affirm its sole authority over weapons.

Prime Minister Nawaf Salam received a call from Arab League Secretary-General Ahmed Aboul Gheit, who highlighted the league’s support for the government’s decisions.

On Tuesday, the Lebanese army redeployed from newly established positions along the Blue Line to its main bases in frontline villages, amid Israeli statements about creating a new buffer zone in southern Lebanon.

Meanwhile, UNIFIL announced the withdrawal of all civilian staff from its headquarters in Naqoura. At the same time, Israeli airstrikes intensified on Beirut’s southern suburbs and southern Lebanon, targeting what Israel claimed were meetings of Hezbollah leaders.

Lebanese Forces communications and media chief Charles Jabbour called for “a clear separation between the political and field dimensions in assessing the developments of the past 48 hours in Lebanon.”

Speaking to Arab News, he said that for the first time, the Lebanese state had taken decisions that effectively dismantled Hezbollah’s military wing, “meaning there is no longer any so-called ‘resistance’ or any weapons outside the state’s authority.”

He described the move as “historic and unprecedented”, while adding that its implementation would take time.

Jabbour added that none of the political parties or forces objected to the government’s move against Hezbollah, including the group’s closest allies. “Figures the party had supported for years remained silent and said it had no right to drag Lebanon into conflict.”

He said that authorities must be given sufficient time, but in return, they must swiftly implement the decisions they have taken. “I believe the Iranian project and its proxies are nearing their end,” he added.

By contrast, Mahmoud Qamati, deputy head of Hezbollah’s political council, said the party’s military escalation against Israel stemmed from what he described as an inability to continue tolerating “the killing of our citizens, the destruction of our people’s homes and accusations of weakness,” while the government, he claimed, continued to make “free concessions” to the enemy and pursue a policy of “strangulation.”

In a speech directed at Hezbollah’s support base in the south, he said: “The period of patience has ended, leaving us with no choice but to return to resistance, even if that means an open war with the enemy.”

The UN estimated that at least 30,000 people were displaced in Lebanon over the past two days as a result of the Israeli raids, while no official figures were released by the Lebanese ministries of interior and social affairs.