Lebanon receives US food aid, Egyptian medical supplies to combat cholera

Solar panels system funded by United States Agency for International Development (USAID) for the Lebanese-Syrian border town of Majdal Anjar, eastern Bekaa valley, Lebanon on Wednesday. (AP)
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Updated 09 November 2022
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Lebanon receives US food aid, Egyptian medical supplies to combat cholera

  • On the sidelines of his participation at COP27 in Sharm El-Sheikh, Mikati held many meetings, in which he requested assistance for Lebanon to overcome its economic crisis

BEIRUT: The US has pledged more than $72 million in emergency food assistance to Lebanon aimed at helping over 650,000 of the most vulnerable people in the country, including refugees from Syria.

Samantha Power, administrator of the US Agency for International Development, announced the aid during a visit to Lebanon on Wednesday.

She met local farmers affected by the deteriorating food security situation in the country.

Power said: “Through the UN World Food Programme, this funding will provide food parcels including rice, lentils and chickpeas for Lebanese families, and electronic food vouchers for Syrian refugees to use in local shops, which supports the Lebanese economy.”

The dollar exchange rate has reached 40,000 Lebanese pounds against the US dollar on the black market, impacting prices amid fears of unprecedented inflation.

Fuel prices have surged in the country due to the uncontrolled dollar exchange rate.

According to the US Embassy in Lebanon, “the repercussions of the Russian-Ukrainian war have impacted food and gasoline prices in Lebanon, depriving more people of food security and worsening the economic crisis in the country.”

The embassy added: “Lebanon usually imports about 80 percent of its wheat from Ukraine. Foodstuff prices in Lebanon have increased between October 2019 and June 2022 by more than 2000 percent. When people lose their income source, the most vulnerable families can no longer afford the food they need.”

The new emergency food assistance is part of worldwide USAID relief amounting to $2 billion announced by US President Joe Biden last September to address the global food security crisis, the embassy said.

“Since 2012, the US has granted over $3 billion in humanitarian aid to secure the needs of the most vulnerable groups in Lebanon,” it added.

Parallel to Power’s visit, Robert Oliphant, parliamentary secretary to the Canadian foreign minister, said that Canada “will continue to cooperate with the Lebanese government.”

After meeting Caretaker Prime Minister Najib Mikati, Oliphant said: “Canada will support Lebanon in all fields, but the required reforms should be implemented to advance the process of signing the final agreement between Lebanon and the IMF.”

Oliphant also stressed the need for Lebanon to elect a new president and form a government.

On the sidelines of his participation at COP27 in Sharm El-Sheikh, Mikati held many meetings, in which he requested assistance for Lebanon to overcome its economic crisis.

A source familiar with the meetings said: “In response to Mikati’s request, everyone agreed on the necessity to elect a president as soon as possible and form a government that can be dealt with regarding providing Lebanon with assistance.”

Meanwhile, an Egyptian military plane carrying a donation of 17 tons of medicines, vaccines and medical supplies arrived in Beirut on Wednesday. The donation aims to combat the spread of cholera in Syrian refugee camps and some Lebanese communities in the north, the south and in Bekaa.

Caretaker Minister of Public Health Firass Abiad oversaw the delivery last Thursday of 600,000 cholera vaccine doses provided by the World Health Organization.

Moreover, the EU announced that it had allocated €800,000 ($803,500) toward community-based water, sanitation and hygiene interventions in areas with high levels of cholera cases in Lebanon.

Janez Lenarcic, commissioner for crisis management in the European Commission, said: “The situation in Lebanon has gone from bad to worse, with about 80 percent of the population living in poverty. Cholera is an indication of this deteriorating situation and it couldn’t have happened at a worse time.”

He added: “The EU funding will allow our partners in the humanitarian field to deploy rapid response teams and make sure that affected communities consume clean water.”


US, UN urge Libyan leaders to make ‘pragmatic compromises’ and unite amid escalating crises

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US, UN urge Libyan leaders to make ‘pragmatic compromises’ and unite amid escalating crises

  • Worsening economic conditions and a fractured judiciary increasingly threaten stability of country split between 2 rival governments, UN Security Council told
  • Washington and the UN continue to work with both authorities on unification efforts to pave the way for national elections but there has been ‘no meaningful progress’

NEW YORK CITY: The US and the UN on Wednesday called on rival political factions in Libya to overcome deepening divisions and accelerate their efforts to organize national elections, warning that worsening economic conditions and a fractured judiciary threaten the country’s stability.
Addressing a meeting of the UN Security Council to discuss the latest developments in the North African country, Massad Boulos, the senior US adviser for Africa and Middle Eastern Affairs, said Washington would step up its diplomatic efforts in support of UN-led initiatives designed to help unify Libyan institutions and pave the way for a democratically elected government.
“Unification is the key to Libya’s stability and prosperity,” he said as he urged the nation’s leaders to reach “pragmatic compromises” on security and economic integration.
Libya has been engulfed in political turmoil and national divisions since the 2011 Arab Spring protests that led to the overthrow and killing of Muammar Qaddafi. It is split between two rival governments, in the east and the west of the country, each of which is backed by armed militias and international patrons.
The US is working with senior officials from both eastern and western Libya to advance military and economic coordination, Boulos said.
In April, US Africa Command will conduct part of its annual “Flintlock” special operations military exercise in the coastal city of Sirte. Forces from both of the Libyan administrations will train together, a development Boulos hailed as a milestone on the path toward military unification.
On the economic front, he welcomed an agreement for a unified development program, signed in November, that empowers the National Oil Corporation and the Central Bank of Libya, and called for it to be fully implemented alongside the adoption of a unified national budget.
The UN’s special representative for Libya, Hanna S. Tetteh, told the Security Council that despite ongoing UN-facilitated talks under a political road map, there had been “no meaningful
progress” between the eastern-based House of Representatives and the Tripoli-based High Council of State regarding key steps required to organize national elections.
The two governments failed to implement an agreement on the selection of the board of the High National Elections Commission, she said, and instead had taken unilateral actions that complicate the process and risk undermining the commission’s unity.
Tetteh has proposed that a small group be formed to resolve the most critical electoral milestones. If that fails, a broader political convening might be necessary, she added.
Six months after she estimated that progress could be achieved within two months if there were sufficient political will, “the facts speak for themselves,” she said.
Libya’s once largely unified judicial system is now increasingly divided, she warned, with the parallel constitutional bodies that operate in Tripoli and Benghazi issuing conflicting rulings. The rival courts have annulled each other’s decisions in recent weeks, including legislation governing past parliamentary mandates and the appointment of senior judicial officials.
“If actions are not taken to preserve the unity, coherence and independence of the judiciary, the conflicting legal systems that emerge will impact the economy, elections, governance, security and human rights,” Tetteh said, describing this as a “red line” for Libyan unity.
She urged the Security Council to ensure individuals who take actions that undermine the unity of the judicial system are held accountable.
The economic outlook is also deteriorating, Tetteh said, citing devaluation of the national currency, rising prices, fuel shortages and growing public discontent.
On Jan. 18, the Central Bank of Libya devalued the dinar by about 14.7 percent, the second such decision in nine months, in an effort to ease foreign currency pressures. The move eroded household purchasing power, particularly among vulnerable groups.
Nearly 80 percent of public expenditure in Libya is devoted to salaries and subsidies, leaving little room for spending on development, Tetteh said. Fragmented institutions and lack of coordination on spending have contributed to foreign currency imbalances and pressure on reserves.
She also highlighted the problems of persistent corruption and smuggling networks that drain state resources. Investigations by the attorney general’s office found that a “fuel-for-crude” barter mechanism that ended in 2025 had cost the state an estimated $1.5 billion annually compared with global market prices.
According to UN agencies, about 30 percent of Libyans live in poverty, and food prices have risen sharply over the past year.
Transnational criminal networks continue to exploit the fragmented security landscape, Tetteh said, citing a report published in January by the UN Office on Drugs and Crime that identified the country as a major transit hub for drug trafficking, often linked to weapons and human smuggling.
A joint report issued this week by the UN’s Human Rights Office and its mission in Libya documented abuses targeting migrants and asylum seekers, including the discovery of 21 bodies in a mass grave in Ajdabiya, and the release of more than 400 migrants from trafficking sites in eastern Libya.
Tetteh called on Libyan authorities to take action, with international support, to dismantle trafficking networks and ensure accountability.