Lebanon: Hospitals Reach Full Capacity Amid Lack of Decision-Making to Face Pandemic

Patients receive dialysis at the Lebanese Hospital Geitaoui in Beirut, Lebanon, August 11, 2020. Reuters/Hannah McKay
Patients receive dialysis at the Lebanese Hospital Geitaoui in Beirut, Lebanon, August 11, 2020. Reuters/Hannah McKay
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Lebanon: Hospitals Reach Full Capacity Amid Lack of Decision-Making to Face Pandemic

Patients receive dialysis at the Lebanese Hospital Geitaoui in Beirut, Lebanon, August 11, 2020. Reuters/Hannah McKay
Patients receive dialysis at the Lebanese Hospital Geitaoui in Beirut, Lebanon, August 11, 2020. Reuters/Hannah McKay

Lebanon’s rising cases of the novel coronavirus has increased warnings that the authorities were losing control of their ability to contain the pandemic.

“There are fears that the country could face a real catastrophe,” the head of the parliamentary health committee, MP Issam Araji, told Asharq Al-Awsat on Tuesday.

In the last 24 hours, Lebanon registered 851 new coronavirus cases, which raises the total since February 21 to 30,838, including 307 deaths.

“The high number of COVID-19 cases across the country has exhausted the health sector,” said Araji.

“There are no more than 65 Intensive Care Unit (ICU) beds, and 250 pre-care beds equipped with oxygen left,” Araji said, adding that Lebanon reached this situation due to lack of respect to precautionary measures and also because some ministries failed to accomplish their tasks in fighting the pandemic.

As an example, the MP said the Tourism Ministry was not monitoring tourist institutions while the Interior Ministry was unsuccessful to ban wedding parties and gatherings.

This week, Caretaker Health Minister Hamad Hassan said he had made a recommendation to the government's coronavirus committee about the necessity to re-impose a two-week lockdown amid the surge in the number of COVID-19 cases nationwide.

The committee preferred not to approve his proposal, but instead decided to impose a lockdown on specific areas to contain the virus.

Araji said a decision to impose a lockdown is necessary. “However, any lockdown would be useless if it is similar to the last one Lebanon imposed in the absence of any monitoring or respect to precautionary measures,” the MP explained.

For his part, Abdul Rahman Bizri, an infectious disease specialist and member of the emergency committee on the coronavirus, told Asharq Al-Awsat that the main problem lies in the lack of any decision or plan to face the pandemic due to the absence of a cabinet.

“Lebanon is now at a sensitive phase: The virus is present everywhere even if at uneven rates,” he said.



Israeli Defense Minister Says He Will End Detention without Charge of Jewish Settlers

Palestinians look at damaged cars after an Israeli settlers attack in Al-Mazraa Al-Qibleyeh near Ramallah, in the Israeli-occupied West Bank, November 20, 2024. (Reuters)
Palestinians look at damaged cars after an Israeli settlers attack in Al-Mazraa Al-Qibleyeh near Ramallah, in the Israeli-occupied West Bank, November 20, 2024. (Reuters)
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Israeli Defense Minister Says He Will End Detention without Charge of Jewish Settlers

Palestinians look at damaged cars after an Israeli settlers attack in Al-Mazraa Al-Qibleyeh near Ramallah, in the Israeli-occupied West Bank, November 20, 2024. (Reuters)
Palestinians look at damaged cars after an Israeli settlers attack in Al-Mazraa Al-Qibleyeh near Ramallah, in the Israeli-occupied West Bank, November 20, 2024. (Reuters)

Israel’s new defense minister said Friday that he would stop issuing warrants to arrest West Bank settlers or hold them without charge or trial — a largely symbolic move that rights groups said risks emboldening settler violence in the Israeli-occupied territory.

Israel Katz called the arrest warrants “severe” and said issuing them was “inappropriate” as Palestinian militant attacks on settlers in the territory grow more frequent. He said settlers could be “brought to justice” in other ways.

The move protects Israeli settlers from being held in “administrative detention,” a shadowy form of incarceration where people are held without charge or trial.

Settlers are rarely arrested in the West Bank, where settler violence against Palestinians has spiraled since the outbreak of the war Oct. 7.

Katz’s decision was celebrated by far-right coalition allies of Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu. National Security Minister and settler firebrand Itamar Ben-Gvir applauded Katz and called the move a “correction of many years of mistreatment” and “justice for those who love the land.”

Since Oct. 7, 2023, violence toward Palestinians by Israeli settlers has soared to new heights, displacing at least 19 entire Palestinian communities, according to Israeli rights group Peace Now. In that time, attacks by Palestinian militants on settlers and within Israel have also grown more common.

An increasing number of Palestinians have been placed in administrative detention. Israel holds 3,443 administrative detainees in prison, according to data from the Israeli Prison Service, reported by rights group Hamoked. That figure stood around 1,200 just before the start of the war. The vast majority of them are Palestinian, with only a handful at any given time Israeli Jews, said Jessica Montell, the director of Hamoked.

“All of these detentions without charge or trial are illegitimate, but to declare that this measure will only be used against Palestinians...is to explicitly entrench another form of ethnic discrimination,” said Montell.