Renowned Trumpeter Brings Life to Battered Beirut

French-Lebanese trumpet player and composer Ibrahim Maalouf performs on stage as part of Beirut Chants Festival, in Beirut, Lebanon December 4, 2020. (Reuters)
French-Lebanese trumpet player and composer Ibrahim Maalouf performs on stage as part of Beirut Chants Festival, in Beirut, Lebanon December 4, 2020. (Reuters)
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Renowned Trumpeter Brings Life to Battered Beirut

French-Lebanese trumpet player and composer Ibrahim Maalouf performs on stage as part of Beirut Chants Festival, in Beirut, Lebanon December 4, 2020. (Reuters)
French-Lebanese trumpet player and composer Ibrahim Maalouf performs on stage as part of Beirut Chants Festival, in Beirut, Lebanon December 4, 2020. (Reuters)

Renowned jazz trumpeter Ibrahim Maalouf delighted crowds on Friday with a concert in Beirut, bringing life to an area battered by Lebanon’s economic meltdown and the catastrophic Aug. 4 port explosion.

“Because of what is happening now in the region and in Lebanon, it makes it even more important to be here, to play music in the streets, in the venues,” Maalouf, a French-Lebanese citizen born in Beirut, told Reuters.

Maalouf, 40, helped raise some 2 million euros for Lebanon with a charity concert in France after the August explosion which killed some 200 people and hit swathes of the capital, including the Beirut Souks area where he performed on Friday.

The audience wore masks to guard against COVID-19 at the concert, part of the annual Beirut Chants Festival, a series of free performances held before Christmas.

Lebanon is in the throes of an economic collapse that has paralyzed its banks and crashed the currency, fueling poverty, unemployment and a brain drain.

“We need something like this now in order to eventually get back up from what we’ve fallen into, and hopefully soon we’ll see more of these events with artists, to be able to revive Lebanon once again,” said Rony Challita, who attended.



Oil Washes up on Russia’s Black Sea Coast after Tankers Damaged, Governor Says

A still image taken from a handout video released by the press service of the Ministry of Natural Resources of the Russian Federation shows a damaged tanker in the Kerch Strait, Russia 16 December 2024. (Reuters / Russian Ministry Natural Resources, Environment handout)
A still image taken from a handout video released by the press service of the Ministry of Natural Resources of the Russian Federation shows a damaged tanker in the Kerch Strait, Russia 16 December 2024. (Reuters / Russian Ministry Natural Resources, Environment handout)
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Oil Washes up on Russia’s Black Sea Coast after Tankers Damaged, Governor Says

A still image taken from a handout video released by the press service of the Ministry of Natural Resources of the Russian Federation shows a damaged tanker in the Kerch Strait, Russia 16 December 2024. (Reuters / Russian Ministry Natural Resources, Environment handout)
A still image taken from a handout video released by the press service of the Ministry of Natural Resources of the Russian Federation shows a damaged tanker in the Kerch Strait, Russia 16 December 2024. (Reuters / Russian Ministry Natural Resources, Environment handout)

Spilled oil has washed up along "tens of kilometers" of the Russian Black Sea coast after two tankers were badly damaged in a storm at the weekend, a local governor said on Tuesday.

Veniamin Kondratyev, the governor of Russia's southern Krasnodar region, said on his Telegram channel that fuel oil had been found along the coast from the districts of Temryuk to Anapa.

"This morning, while monitoring the shoreline, stains of fuel oil were discovered. Oil products washed ashore for several tens of kilometers," he said.

The Volgoneft 212 tanker split in half on Sunday in the Kerch Strait, between the Black Sea and the Sea of Azov, while the Volgoneft 239 ran aground 80 meters (87 yards) from the shore near the port of Taman in the strait.

The more than 50-year-old ships were carrying some 9,200 metric tons (62,000 barrels) of oil products in total, Russian news agency TASS reported, raising fears it could become one of the largest environmental disasters to hit the region in years.

A video posted on Zvezda TV's Telegram channel on Tuesday showed a black, oil-like substance along the coast of the Black Sea resort of Anapa, southeast of the Kerch Strait.

The video showed oil-like stains along a beach strewn with tree branches.

Meanwhile, a video broadcast by the state TV channel Vesti showed several birds covered with oil flapping their wings and struggling to fly.

Russia's Natural Resources and Ecology Ministry said on Monday that fuel oil had leaked into the sea, but the scale of the spillage was still not clear.

Natural Resources and Ecology Minister Alexander Kozlov said some of the fuel oil could have sunk to the seabed due to cold weather.

The shipping industry has raised concern in recent months over the risks and potential for collisions posed by hundreds of "shadow" tankers in open sea lanes, with little incentive for these vessels to follow cleaner shipping standards.

The Kerch Strait, which separates mainland Russia from the Moscow-annexed Crimea region, is a key route for exports of its grain and fuel products.

One member of the Volgoneft 212's crew was killed in Sunday's accident, while all 14 people on the Volgoneft 239 were rescued.