Lebanon Foils Medicine Smuggling Via Beirut Airport

A man, mask-clad due to the COVID-19 coronavirus pandemic, waits to receive medication from the pharmacy of the Amel NGO in Lebanon's southern coastal city of Tyre on July 22, 2020. JOSEPH EID/AFP
A man, mask-clad due to the COVID-19 coronavirus pandemic, waits to receive medication from the pharmacy of the Amel NGO in Lebanon's southern coastal city of Tyre on July 22, 2020. JOSEPH EID/AFP
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Lebanon Foils Medicine Smuggling Via Beirut Airport

A man, mask-clad due to the COVID-19 coronavirus pandemic, waits to receive medication from the pharmacy of the Amel NGO in Lebanon's southern coastal city of Tyre on July 22, 2020. JOSEPH EID/AFP
A man, mask-clad due to the COVID-19 coronavirus pandemic, waits to receive medication from the pharmacy of the Amel NGO in Lebanon's southern coastal city of Tyre on July 22, 2020. JOSEPH EID/AFP

Lebanon’s Internal Security Forces have foiled an attempt to smuggle, through the Rafik Hariri International airport, hundreds of boxes of medicines to Egypt.

The operation came at a time when Lebanon suffers from a shortage of medicine supply after the Central Bank announced a plan to lift subsidies over the dollar crisis gripping the country.

Head of the Syndicate of Pharmacists Ghassan Al-Amine told Asharq Al-Awsat that the price of medicine in Lebanon has “become the lowest” in the region for being sold at the exchange rate of LL1,500 to $1 while in the black market the Lebanese pound has reached above LL8,000.

“The low cost of medicine makes it more vulnerable for smuggling,” Al-Amine said.

On Tuesday, the ISF said in a statement that it successfully foiled an operation to smuggle suspicious quantities of medication to Egypt.

The detainees confessed they bought the medicines from different pharmacies in Lebanon.

The ISF said it later released the six suspects on bail.

Al-Amine explained that the shortage of medicine in the Lebanese market is not only caused by smuggling to other countries but because Lebanon has stopped importing large quantities of medicine.

He said that in the past two months, Lebanese people started to stockpile medicines fearing they will no longer be available or that prices will increase after the Central Bank said it would lift subsidies by the end of October.

He said importers have only enough stocks to last for 45 days. “This is why pharmacies are only selling medicines in small quantities,” he explained, warning from a worsening crisis in the coming months.



France Declines to Comment on Algeria’s Anger over Recognition of Morocco’s Claim over Sahara

French President Emmanuel Macron and Algerian President Abdelmadjid Tebboune. (AFP file)
French President Emmanuel Macron and Algerian President Abdelmadjid Tebboune. (AFP file)
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France Declines to Comment on Algeria’s Anger over Recognition of Morocco’s Claim over Sahara

French President Emmanuel Macron and Algerian President Abdelmadjid Tebboune. (AFP file)
French President Emmanuel Macron and Algerian President Abdelmadjid Tebboune. (AFP file)

Paris declined to comment on Algeria’s “strong condemnation” of the French government’s decision to recognize Morocco’s claim over the Sahara.

The office of the French Foreign Ministry refused to respond to an AFP request for a comment on the Algeria’s stance.

It did say that further comments could impact the trip Algerian President Abdelmadjid Tebboune is set to make to France in late September or early October.

The visit has been postponed on numerous occasions over disagreements between the two countries.

France had explicitly expressed its constant and clear support for the autonomy rule proposal over the Sahara during Foreign Minister Stephane Sejourne’s visit to Morocco in February, reported AFP.

The position has helped improve ties between Rabat and Paris.

On Thursday, the Algerian Foreign Ministry expressed “great regret and strong denunciation" about the French government's decision to recognize an autonomy plan for the Western Sahara region "within Moroccan sovereignty”.

Algeria was informed of the decision by France in recent days, an Algerian foreign ministry statement added.

The ministry also said Algeria would draw all the consequences from the decision and hold the French government alone completely responsible.