Health Ministry Raid Uncovers Tons of Hoarded Medicine in Lebanon

The health minister during one his raids on Tuesday. (NNA)
The health minister during one his raids on Tuesday. (NNA)
TT

Health Ministry Raid Uncovers Tons of Hoarded Medicine in Lebanon

The health minister during one his raids on Tuesday. (NNA)
The health minister during one his raids on Tuesday. (NNA)

The Lebanese Health Ministry announced on Tuesday that it has uncovered tons of medicine that have been hoarded at warehouses throughout the country amid complaints that pharmacies have been running out of goods.

Lebanon is grappling with a raft of shortages due to what the World Bank has termed one of the world’s worst financial crises since the 1850s.

Lebanon’s foreign currency reserves are fast depleting and the cash-strapped state has started to gradually reduce subsidies on key imports including fuel and flour.

Medicine importers say hundreds of drugs have disappeared from the market, as the central bank owes suppliers abroad millions of dollars and they can no longer open new lines of credit.

For its part, the government accuses importers of hoarding medicine with the aim of selling it at a higher price once medicine subsidies are reduced by the state and drugs become more expensive.

With security backup, caretaker Health Minister Hamad Hassan led raids at several warehouses. Video showed aisles of medicine stored at the locations.

The hoarders have reportedly been referred to the judiciary.

Hassan’s raid revealed that tons of medicine that have been reported missing in the market for months were actually being stored at the warehouses. Among them are life-saving drugs, antibodies and baby milk.

In a statement, the minister urged the hoarders to send their cache to pharmacies, warning that they will be held accountable for their actions.

Head of the pharmacists’ syndicate, Ghassan Al-Amin welcomed the minister’s move, but said it will not resolve the medicine crisis.

“The minister’s move is excellent and he must keep up his work,” he told Asharq Al-Awsat.

“We are in constant contact with the Health Ministry, but even if the hoarded medicine is sold in the market, the crisis will not be resolved because its root problem has not been addressed,” he explained.

The minister’s move will “win the market a week at most and then we will return to the same problem,” he added.

He explained that companies have not been able to import medicine for three months because of a failure to open new lines of credit.

The caches were discovered in warehouses on the Chouf coast south of Beirut, al-Zahrani and Nabatiyeh in the South, and Jadra in Mount Lebanon.

Hassan said Tuesday that the confiscated medicine in the Chouf area will be handed out by his ministry to the people free of charge.

“Hoarders and importers are adopting a mafia-like and criminal mentality,” the minister, describing the discovered caches as a “resounding scandal”.



Italy Says Suspending EU Sanctions on Syria Could Help Encourage Transition

In this photo released by the Syrian official news agency SANA, Syria's de facto leader Ahmad al-Sharaa, right, meets with Italian Foreign Minister Antonio Tajani in Damascus, Syria, Friday, Jan. 10, 2025. (SANA via AP)
In this photo released by the Syrian official news agency SANA, Syria's de facto leader Ahmad al-Sharaa, right, meets with Italian Foreign Minister Antonio Tajani in Damascus, Syria, Friday, Jan. 10, 2025. (SANA via AP)
TT

Italy Says Suspending EU Sanctions on Syria Could Help Encourage Transition

In this photo released by the Syrian official news agency SANA, Syria's de facto leader Ahmad al-Sharaa, right, meets with Italian Foreign Minister Antonio Tajani in Damascus, Syria, Friday, Jan. 10, 2025. (SANA via AP)
In this photo released by the Syrian official news agency SANA, Syria's de facto leader Ahmad al-Sharaa, right, meets with Italian Foreign Minister Antonio Tajani in Damascus, Syria, Friday, Jan. 10, 2025. (SANA via AP)

Italy's foreign minister says a moratorium on European Union sanctions on Syria could help encourage the country's transition after the ouster of President Bashar al-Assad by opposition groups.

Foreign Minister Antonio Tajani visited Syria on Friday and expressed Italy’s keen interest in helping Syria recover from civil war, rebuild its broken economy and help stabilize the region.

Tajani, who met with Syria’s new de facto leaders, including Ahmed al-Sharaa, said a stable Syria and Lebanon was of strategic and commercial importance to Europe.

He said the fall of Assad's government, as well as the Lebanon parliament's vote on Thursday to elect army commander Joseph Aoun as president, were signs of optimism for Middle East stability.

He said Italy wanted to play a leading role in Syria’s recovery and serve as a bridge between Damascus and the EU, particularly given Italy’s commercial and strategic interests in the Mediterranean.

“The Mediterranean can no longer just be a sea of death, a cemetery of migrants but a sea of commerce a sea of development,” he said.

Tajani later traveled to Lebanon and met with Aoun. Italy has long played a sizeable role in the UN peacekeeping force for Lebanon, UNIFIL.

On the eve of his visit, Tajani presided over a meeting in Rome with US Secretary of State Antony Blinken and officials from Britain, France and Germany as well as the EU foreign policy chief. He said that meeting of the so-called Quintet on Syria was key to begin the discussion about a change to the EU sanctions.

“The sanctions were against the Assad regime. If the situation has changed, we have to change our choices,” Tajani said.