Anger in Lebanon with army after people-smuggling boat sinks

Lebanese army soldiers stand near a vehicle entering port of Tripoli after a boat capsized off the Lebanese coast of Tripoli overnight, in Tripoli, northern Lebanon April 24, 2022. (REUTERS)
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Updated 24 April 2022
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Anger in Lebanon with army after people-smuggling boat sinks

  • Former PM Hariri calls for quick investigation
  • Monday declared as day of national mourning

BEIRUT: Tensions rose in the northern Lebanese city of Tripoli on Sunday after a boat capsized and sank off its coast as it was being pursued by the army, with agitated crowds gathering outside the hospitals treating the survivors.

Six people, including an 18-month-old girl called Taleen Al-Hamwi and two women, died.

There were 45 survivors as of Sunday morning, and more than 10 people remain missing.

About 60 people had boarded the boat from an area between Qalamoun and Harisha, a beach that is not subject to strict security control and is often used for human smuggling activities.

The boat was headed toward Cyprus and then onto mainland Europe.

Lebanese Prime Minister Najib Mikati announced a national day of mourning on Monday.

Former Prime Minister Saad Hariri called for a “quick investigation that reveals the circumstances and determines the responsibility. Otherwise, we have something else to say.”

He tweeted: “When conditions force Lebanese citizens to resort to death boats to escape from the state's hell, this means that we are in a fallen state. Tripoli is announcing today this fall through its victims. The testimonies of the victims of the death boat are dangerous, and we will not allow (these testimonies) to be buried in the sea of the city.”

Families of the victims headed to the shore to find out the fate of the missing. Their anger also focused on the Lebanese army.

Journalist Ghassan Rifi from Tripoli told Arab News that the boat had a lower cabin where the women and children were probably hiding. There was a possibility they may have sunk along with the boat, he said.

The commander of the naval forces, Col. Haitham Dannawi, accused the boat's captain of trying to escape and crashing the vessel into the naval forces' cruiser.

The ill-fated boat was made in 1974, he said.

It was small, 10 meters long, 3 meters wide, and the permitted load was only 10 people, he told a press conference. But it lacked safety measures.

He said: “The patrol that followed the boat a few miles from the shore and in the territorial waters tried to urge it to return because the situation was not safe and, if we did not stop the boat, it would have sunk outside the territorial waters.”

No weapons were used by naval forces, he said.

“The boat sank quickly because of the overload and were it not for the presence of our forces near it, the number of victims would have been greater.”

He said the boat carried 15 times more weight than it could handle and that the army did not commit any mistake on a technical and ground level.

“We bear our full responsibilities in the army leadership, and if there is any verbal offense, we will hold the person concerned responsible.”

A dispute broke out between soldiers and the families at the port of Tripoli after the families tried to prevent Social Affairs Minister Hector Hajjar, delegated by Mikati, from completing his press statement.

The families confronted him and the other officials present with insults, while the Al-Qubba area witnessed heavy gunfire during the victims’ funerals.

Angry protesters in Tripoli destroyed a military medical center amid calls to take to the city’s streets and “declare a major escalation.”

One of the survivors, a young man in his twenties who was wet and shivering, said shortly after midnight on Saturday: “The security cruiser chased us, and the officers on board said they would bury us. Then, they rammed the boat in the middle and on the sides until it sank.”

Security sources suggested that the number of victims could rise.

The tragic incident came a week after the army thwarted an illegal immigration operation at the Arida border point in the north with the capture of a boat that had 20 Syrians on board, including women and children.

“Smugglers get thousands of dollars from migrants. In the Saturday incident, each person paid at least $2,000,” said Rifi.

Last year, the army stopped 21 boats carrying 707 people, according to the Lebanese Army Guidance Directorate.

In 2020, the army stopped four boats carrying 126 people.


Are water desalination plants the Gulf’s Achilles’ in the latest Middle East conflict?

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Are water desalination plants the Gulf’s Achilles’ in the latest Middle East conflict?

  • Iran strike on Bahrain desalination plant exposes how Gulf states depend on fragile coastal infrastructure for drinking water
  • Analysts warn attacks on water facilities risk catastrophic civilian disruption across Gulf economies and urban life

LONDON: Wars in the Middle East have long been measured in spikes to global oil prices, the sight of burning refineries, and missile trails crisscrossing over busy shipping lanes. Now, for the first time, it is also being measured at the tap.
Early on March 8, Bahrain’s Interior Ministry said an Iranian drone struck a desalination plant near Muharraq, causing material damage and injuring three people, labeling it an indiscriminate civilian attack.
It was the first time a Gulf government publicly acknowledged a strike on its drinking-water infrastructure — a red line analysts had long warned about.
Iran’s Foreign Minister Abbas Araghchi insisted Iran was only responding in kind, accusing the US of first hitting a plant on Qeshm Island and cutting off water to some 30 villages, although he did not provide evidence.
As both sides trade accusations, the Bahrain strike has turned a piece of civil engineering that few ever think about into an overt military target — with profound implications for a region that quite literally runs on seawater.
“It’s not about the damage to this one particular facility — it’s the precedent that this somehow (could) become normalized,” Michael Christopher Low, a history professor and director of the Middle East Center at the University of Utah, told Arab News.
“It’s very clear that attacking water infrastructures and water sources is an obvious human rights violation.”
The incident, he added, puts “a lot of strain on the region’s security that previously had been seemingly taboo.”
No place on Earth relies on desalination like the Gulf. Gulf Cooperation Council states operate more than 400 plants, accounting for 60 percent of global capacity and 40 percent of the world’s desalinated water.
In Kuwait it supplies 90 percent of drinking water, Oman 86 percent, Saudi Arabia 70 percent, and the UAE 42 percent.
This touches every sector, from households, agriculture and green spaces, to power plant cooling, data centers, and industrial hubs driving post-oil economies.
Around 100 million people across the wider Gulf depend on these facilities for most of their drinking water, a shift that began in the 1970s as oil wealth and the harsh climate outstripped meager aquifers.
In this sense, the Gulf states have become what Low dubbed “saltwater kingdoms” — global superpowers in the production of human-made freshwater drawn from the sea whose survival is tied less to rivers or rain than to the steady output of coastal mega-plants.
Eight of the world’s 10 largest desalination plants line the Arabian Peninsula (Israel’s Sorek plants take the other two spots). Without them, life as we know it in Kuwait, Qatar, the UAE, and much of Saudi Arabia would grind to a halt.
The Bahrain and the alleged Qeshm strikes “remind us of the fragility of desalination plants as a water supply infrastructure,” Kaven Madani, director of the UNU Institute for Water, Environment and Health, told Arab News.
Most plants share one vulnerability: geography. Clustered along the Gulf and Red Sea coasts near power stations and ports, they are easy to target with missiles or drones.
While coastal siting makes engineering sense — as intake pipes need sea access, and energy‑intensive operations require grid proximity — it leaves them exposed as the war blurs front lines and home fronts.
Analysts have long warned of this. In the Iran‑Iraq war of the 1980s, Baghdad eyed Gulf plants for sabotage. During the 1990 Kuwait invasion and 1991 Gulf War, Iraqi forces dumped millions of barrels of oil into the Gulf, threatening desalination intakes.
While Saudi Arabia managed to deploy protective booms around key facilities, including Riyadh’s main supplier, in Kuwait, Iraqi sabotage damaged or destroyed much of the country’s desalination capacity.
More recently, Houthi attacks targeted Saudi sites like Al‑Shuqaiq and Jizan, proving non‑state actors also see water as leverage.
The Bahrain strike confirmed that in a wider regional war, what once seemed a theoretical vulnerability can quickly become operational.
“A country like Saudi Arabia has a lot of backup capacity and ability to move reserves from one part of the country to the other,” said Low, who recently toured Shuaibah, one of the world’s largest integrated water‑power plants.
Smaller states like Bahrain and Qatar, he said, are more exposed, whereas larger states can lean on the “total system,” including underground reserves that can plug gaps in the short term.
Yet even the biggest Gulf states are not immune.
“I have a lot of confidence in the Gulf states to be able to keep up with population growth,” said Low. “But I don’t think there’s a way to get around dependency (on desalination plants). It’s a reality of 21st century life in the Arabian Peninsula.”
What happens if a major plant goes offline? Utilities can lean on storage tanks and network tweaks for the first 24 hours, blending in limited groundwater or imports where possible.
By 48-72 hours, however, prolonged outages trigger pressure drops, rationing or hospital prioritization over homes.
The pain would not be uniform. Cities like Dubai or Dammam — with multiple plants, ample storage and logistics — could absorb a single hit temporarily.
Smaller states like Bahrain, or more peripheral areas, would likely feel the pinch faster. Beyond household taps, outages could idle factories, crash data-center cooling and hobble power plants, many of which gulp desalinated water for their own operations.
Repairs are not quick either. Membranes, pumps, intakes and power links demand specialized parts and teams that can take days or weeks to be fixed in a conflict zone.
Climate stress adds another layer: the Gulf’s warming, saltier waters already push older plants to their limits, while shutdowns disrupt brine discharge and shorten lifespans.
“It all depends on the system and which part is impacted, whether it is an impact on a plant used for industrial or drinking purposes, which city or population group it is supplying water to, and then what else is available at their disposal,” said Madani.
“We don’t know how long the war (will last), and the level of damage we can expect. But what we know is that these systems are vulnerable to direct attacks.”
Pollutants — from oil spills to radioactive contamination — could compound the damage in the shared, semi-enclosed waters of the Persian Gulf, he added.
The Bahrain strike comes just weeks after a UN-backed report declared an era of “global water bankruptcy,” with Gulf countries viewed as textbook cases of living beyond their hydrological means.
Over-pumped fossil aquifers offer little buffer, with much of what is left being non-renewable or too saline for longer emergencies.
Gulf states are diversifying on paper: expanding wastewater reuse, cutting leaks, piloting solar-powered and inland modular plants, and linking grids for cross-city or border flows.
Yet interconnection risks spreading failures if multiple hubs fall, and no mix of groundwater, surface water or reuse can quickly replace big coastal output. In war, conservation — from slashing irrigation to prioritizing sectors — buys days, not solutions.
“Unfortunately, there are not many solutions to this,” said Madani. “Peace building and respecting the rules of the laws of war is the most effective solution in the short term.”
Over the longer term, he called for a serious reassessment of existing protection frameworks, “with rigorous evaluation of the risks that armed conflict and extreme events pose to water infrastructure.”
Many Gulf states had contingency plans, Madani noted, but “none were ready for this level of conflict.”
While the Bahrain and alleged Qeshm strikes mark desalination plants as new strategic targets alongside oil facilities and shipping lanes — with civilian fallout far beyond the battlefield — there is a striking irony.
Iran itself is grappling with water collapse. Depleting aquifers, the vanishing of Lake Urmia, and “day zero” scares in several cities have all been flagged in the UN’s water bankruptcy report.
Normalizing such attacks risks blowback on Tehran’s own fragile water infrastructures, hitting its civilians hardest.
“This is strategic self-harm,” said Low. “Attacking a desalination facility is, and should be, taboo. To me, it (is) analogous to using a nuclear weapon. These are things we shouldn’t be considering because they’re far too dangerous and disastrous.
“And so it sets a very dangerous precedent that this could be normalized,” he added, warning that this only hands states like Israel a pretext to target civilian infrastructure.
Indeed, Article 54 of Additional Protocol I to the Geneva Conventions prohibits attacks on civilian water facilities.
Whether Iran can wield water as leverage, in the same way it is exploiting the Strait of Hormuz and oil prices, remains an open question.
Desalination plants are dispersed, not a single chokepoint, and Gulf states are already hardening defenses with Western support.
Yet analysts warn that even a handful of successful strikes could escalate quickly, with effects that would reach homes, hospitals and workplaces almost immediately, complicating the rules of engagement and raising the cost of miscalculation.
For now, Gulf taps are still flowing. But the Bahrain strike offers a stark preview. In one of the world’s driest regions, the front line now runs through the very plants that make life possible.