Beirut Temporarily Retreats over Coronavirus

The so-called Ring Highway in Beirut
The so-called Ring Highway in Beirut
TT

Beirut Temporarily Retreats over Coronavirus

The so-called Ring Highway in Beirut
The so-called Ring Highway in Beirut

Neither my generation nor even the generation before us perhaps, has ever been faced with similarly unjust circumstances: For something to suddenly emerge and ravage everything that humans had worked hard to achieve.

Life was not rosy before, we were always on the cusp of war, but what we are now facing is a different enemy, one that forces us to reverse our priorities.

Disputes between sects, classes, generations, political systems and ideologies took a back foot. The panic that this pandemic instills in people stems from a feeling that we are all part of an unfair battle that demands constant vigilance against virtually nothing.

These invisible nanoparticles, however, could be spread by your mother, father, son, daughter, girlfriend or spouse, turning everyone you love into a source of fear. These particles can kill you without having to find a moral or legal justification. Life imitates art in many respects, and we are all protagonist K of the Kafka novel The Trial, tried and hanged without ever knowing what crime he had committed to deserve such a tragic fate. Are we not nameless, ageless and without titles facing this stealthy wolf? Are we not Ks who have not been granted anything but barrels of tyranny and frightening deadly blades of dark belligerent forces? Those who survived both are now facing an even more terrifying and arbitrary enemy.

Beirut, previously known as the “pearl of the east,” has never been stable. After a months-long political earthquake caused by the corrupt sectarian power-sharing confessional system, which has led the country to bankruptcy, the coronavirus emerges. At first, the Lebanese took it very lightly, but it soon forced them to stay at home.

While Beirut’s situation is not the worst, the virus has struck an exhausted city with a weak immunity. It had closed in on itself even before the state of medical emergency was declared and movement on its narrow borders were curtailed. Its neighborhoods are almost deserted, and its streets are traveled by only a few cars, and a few passersby who stare, stunned at the emptiness and silence. Those who dare move around, out of curiosity, to work, or sheer adventurism, interact with one another with extreme and obsessive caution. A sneeze or a cough is enough to potentially incite the same kind of panic that an enemy sonic boom or bomb would cause.

Hamra Street does not look like itself. Most of its establishments and stores are closed and those that are open have no customers. Most of those I came across were either panhandlers or homeless, or they were stockpiling basic goods. The cafes were empty, with most of their intellectuals at home. As for the downtown area, where revolutionaries had gathered, most of its tents were empty.

Sartre’s famous phrase, “Hell is other people”, comes to mind as the city is paralyzed by its residents' fear of everyone they meet and greet. Even beauty is lost in times like these, as it turns into potential for the spread of the virus. However, there is another side to this image, represented by those anonymous soldiers who deliberately volunteer to deter danger from the residents of their capital. These are the many Fida’i doctors and nurses in the health sector. Not having any preference for any identity, ideology, sect, class or age, this pandemic was able to mobilize all social forces to confront it. Once the city succeeds in resecting it, the regime will return to its corruption and the revolution to the streets.



Who’s in the Frame to Be Lebanon’s Next President?

The Lebanese Parliament building a day before a session to elect the Lebanese president, in Beirut, Lebanon, 08 January 2025. (EPA)
The Lebanese Parliament building a day before a session to elect the Lebanese president, in Beirut, Lebanon, 08 January 2025. (EPA)
TT

Who’s in the Frame to Be Lebanon’s Next President?

The Lebanese Parliament building a day before a session to elect the Lebanese president, in Beirut, Lebanon, 08 January 2025. (EPA)
The Lebanese Parliament building a day before a session to elect the Lebanese president, in Beirut, Lebanon, 08 January 2025. (EPA)

Lebanon's parliament will attempt to elect a new head of state on Thursday, with officials seeing better odds of success in a political landscape shaken by Israel's assault on Hezbollah and the toppling of the group's ally Bashar al-Assad in Syria.

The post, reserved for a Maronite Christian in the sectarian power-sharing system, has been vacant since Michel Aoun's term ended in October 2022.

While there are always many Maronite hopefuls, including the leaders of the two largest Christian parties - Samir Geagea and Gebran Bassil - sources say the focus is currently on the following three names:

JOSEPH AOUN

General Joseph Aoun, 60, has been commander of the US-backed Lebanese army since 2017, leading the military through a devastating financial crisis that paralyzed much of the Lebanese state after the banking system collapsed in 2019.

On Aoun's watch, US aid continued to flow to the army, part of a US policy focused on supporting state institutions to curb the influence of the heavily armed, Iran-backed Hezbollah, which Washington deems a terrorist group.

Shortly after his appointment, the army waged an offensive to clear ISIS militants from an enclave at the Syrian border, drawing praise from the US ambassador at the time who said the military had done an "excellent job".

His training has included two infantry officer courses in the United States.

Lebanese politicians have said Aoun's candidacy enjoys US approval. A State Department spokesperson said it was "up to Lebanon to choose its next president, not the United States or any external actor".

Hezbollah official Wafiq Safa has said last week there was "no veto" on Aoun. But sources familiar with Hezbollah thinking say it will not support Aoun.

His candidacy has also been opposed by Lebanon's two largest Christian parties - the Lebanese Forces and the Free Patriotic Movement.

Three other former army chiefs - Emile Lahoud, Michel Suleiman and Michel Aoun - have served as president.

Parliament Speaker Nabih Berri - a Hezbollah ally - has said the constitution would need to be amended in order for Aoun to take the post. It currently forbids a serving state official from becoming head of state.

JIHAD AZOUR

Azour, 58, served as finance minister in the Western-backed government of former Prime Minister Fouad Siniora between 2005 and 2008, a period of intense political conflict in Lebanon pitting factions backed by Iran and Syria against others supported by the West.

Since 2017, he has served as Director of the Middle East and Central Asia Department at the International Monetary Fund (IMF). He holds a PhD in International Finance and a post-graduate degree in International Economics and Finance, both from the Institut d'Etudes Politiques de Paris.

He first emerged as a presidential candidate in 2023, when factions including both of the Lebanese Forces and the Free Patriotic Movement voted for him. He received 59 votes.

Hezbollah and its closest allies voted for Suleiman Franjieh in that session - the last time parliament attempted to elect a head of state. Franjieh secured 51 votes.

Hezbollah at the time described Azour as a confrontational candidate - a reference to his role in the Siniora cabinet.

Azour said at the time that his candidacy was not intended as a challenge to anyone, but rather "a call for unity, for breaking down alignments and for a search for common ground in order to get out of the crisis".

ELIAS AL-BAYSARI

Major-General Elias Baysari, 60, has been interim head of the General Security directorate since the term of his predecessor, Major General Abbas Ibrahim, ended in 2023 with no consensus among Lebanese factions on who should replace him.

The security agency Baysari runs is Lebanon's most powerful internal security force, running Lebanon's border crossings and domestic intelligence operations.

He was a little-known figure in Lebanese public life until his promotion to the head of General Security.

He holds a PhD in law from the Lebanese University.