FBI to join investigation into Beirut port explosion, U.S. calls for end to dysfunctional governance

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Beirut Port explosion. The FBI would join a probe of the massive explosion that killed at least 178 people, injured 6,000 people and forced around 300,000 out of their homes in the city, which was already sinking deep into financial crisis. Some 30-40 people remain missing.

U.S. diplomat David Hale said Lebanon needed “economic and fiscal reforms, an end to dysfunctional governance and to empty promises.”

BEIRUT – A top U.S. diplomat said on Thursday the FBI would join a probe of the massive Beirut explosion that killed at least 178 people, urging change in Lebanon to “make sure something like this never happens again.”

On a tour of a demolished Beirut neighborhood, U.S. Undersecretary for Political Affairs David Hale said Lebanon needed “economic and fiscal reforms, an end to dysfunctional governance and to empty promises.”

The explosion at Beirut port injured 6,000 people and forced around 300,000 out of their homes in the city, which was already sinking deep into financial crisis. Some 30-40 people remain missing.

Authorities have blamed the Aug. 4 blast on a huge stockpile of ammonium nitrate stored for years at the port without safety measures.

“The FBI will soon join Lebanese and international investigators at the invitation of the Lebanese to help answer questions about the circumstances that led up to this explosion,” Hale said on Thursday.

Lebanese President Michel Aoun has said the investigation will look into whether the cause was negligence, an accident or possibly “external interference.”

Aoun has asked France for satellite imagery for the probe. A UK Royal Navy vessel was also deployed to Beirut to survey the site.

An Israeli seismological expert said on Thursday the explosion was preceded by a series of blasts, the last of which was combustion of fireworks.

Image: Senior U.S. State Department official David Hale visits Beirut after deadly blast
U.S. Under Secretary of State for Political Affairs David Hale, listens to an NGO volunteer during his visit to a main NGOs gathering point near the scene of the last week’s explosion that hit the seaport of Beirut, Lebanon on Aug. 13, 2020.Hussein Malla / Pool via Reuters

FACTIONAL RIFTS

Authorities have estimated losses from the blast at $15 billion, a bill Lebanon cannot pay: it already defaulted on its enormous sovereign debt in March and IMF talks had stalled.

Humanitarian aid has poured in. But foreign countries that once helped have made clear they will not give funds to help Lebanon out of economic collapse without reforms to tackle state corruption and waste.

Hale, the No. 3 U.S. diplomat, said Washington would back any new government that “reflects the will of the people” and enacts reforms. The fallout from the explosion forced the cabinet to resign this week.

But agreement on a new one could be daunting in a country with factional rifts and a sectarian power-sharing system. Public anger has grown at a political elite in power for decades, which many blame for the country’s woes.

The now-caretaker government came to office in January with backing from the heavily armed Shi’ite Muslim Hezbollah with its allies who have a majority of seats in parliament.

Image: Beirut Picks Up The Pieces After Deadly Blast
Bulldozers continue work at the base of the destroyed Beirut port silos on Aug. 13, 2020 in Beirut, Lebanon.Chris McGrath / Getty Images

The United States classifies Hezbollah, which is backed by Tehran, as terrorist. Iran’s Foreign Minister Mohammad Javad Zarif landed in Beirut on Thursday evening, local media said.

Security forces were heavily deployed in Beirut on Thursday, stopping protesters from reaching a legislative session.

“They are all criminals, they are the ones who caused this catastrophe, this explosion,” said protester Lina Boubess, 60.

Protesters urging foreign countries not to bail out the Lebanese politicians “they stole our money, our lives, our dreams and the dreams of our children? What more do we have to lose?”

“Isn’t it enough that they stole our money, our lives, our dreams and the dreams of our children? What more do we have to lose?”

Parliament approved an earlier government decision declaring a state of emergency, which activists criticized as an attempt to suppress dissent. It also confirmed the resignations of eight MPs who quit after the blast.

REUTERS

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