Lebanon gets $200 Million from the World Bank to fix 500 km of roads

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A main road in Batroun district . Potholes  spring up out of nowhere on  Lebanon's road
A main road in Batroun district . Potholes spring up out of nowhere on Lebanon’s road
The World Bank said Tuesday it has earmarked $200 million for repairing Lebanon’s unsafe roads, signaling a resumption of international aid months after the election of a president following a two-year political vacuum in the tiny Mediterranean country.

The international lender said in a statement that the funds will be used to repair around 500 kilometers (312 miles) of roads in the first phase of a broader government plan “to revamp the country’s crumbling road sector.”

It said the Roads and Employment Project was approved Monday by its board of directors.

Ferid Belhaj, the World Bank’s Middle East director, said the project would “help Lebanon continue to offer basic services both to its citizens and to Syrian refugees in the country.”

Lebanon is home to some 1.2 million Syrian refugees, the equivalent of a quarter of its own population.

Hundreds of millions of dollars in assistance money from the World Bank was held up as Lebanon’s long-feuding factions failed to agree on a president for more than two years. In October, the parliament was finally able to elect Michel Aoun, the leader of a Christian party allied with the Shiite Hezbollah movement.
ASSOCIATED PRESS

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