A silent, insidious war is being waged against Lebanon. A war that’s destroying the very fabric of Lebanese society, throwing a staggering number of families into poverty, driving the economy to the ground, destroying the already fragile political system and poisoning the air, the water and the land.
Over a million Lebanese live under poverty line, unemployment fluctuates between 25 and 30%, 13,000 people lost their jobs in the past few months; Lebanon’s is going through an unprecedented economical crisis without any solution in sight. If we add the refugee, the garbage and the political crisis, we realize that what’s happening is nothing else than a war waged against Lebanon, aimed at destroying it from the inside.
Lebanese are fierce fighters. Anytime anyone has threatened their land, they fought like lions to defend it, ultimately defeating the invaders, whomever they were, foreign armies or local militias. But when it comes to defend their basic citizens rights, the lions become sheep, and their fighting spirit changes into obedience and acceptance.
If anyone wanted to wage war against Lebanon, he’d know by experience that the price of military action would be huge: soldiers killed, fortunes spent on bombs and missiles, not the mention the PR nightmare trying to sway international public opinion. So why go through all this trouble when you can wait and watch the whole country, all regions and religions included, destroy itself?
Think about it, garbage rotting and burning everywhere are not so different from a biological attack on the Lebanese people. The air, the water and the soil are being poisoned. Breathing, eating and drinking in Lebanon can seriously harm your health and cause fatal diseases. It’s just more insidious than a bomb, but equally efficient.
The seashore is so polluted and private beaches so expensive, more and more Lebanese are avoiding them. When they can afford it, they travel to Cyprus, Turkey or Egypt. That’s a serious blow to the Tourism industry – one of the country’s last profitable sectors.
Rather than fix the problem, the remaining public beaches are going to be privatized – Kfaradiba is a screaming example – while garbage dumps are being set up on different parts of Lebanon’ cost line – in Bourj Hammoud and Costa Brava, to only name these two.
The Costa Brava dump will not only dramatically increase the seashore pollution but, because of its proximity to Beirut’s international airport, will threaten air traffic safety, and subsequently isolate Lebanon from the world.
The economy is such a mess, every day dozens of Lebanese lose their jobs while companies and businesses are downsizing if not closing down altogether. Real estate prices are so high most Lebanese can’t afford to buy the tiniest apartment. The overall cost of living has constantly increased but wages were kept as low as possible, thus driving the majority of the population into poverty.
Today, 30% of the population lives under the poverty line. In other words, more than a million Lebanese don’t have enough money to feed their families. Let alone send their children to school or provide them with basic healthcare.
All the while a tiny minority is making and spending obscene amounts of money. The multi-million dollars weddings everyone talks about are only a fraction of that obscenity, the glittering tip of an outrageous iceberg.
This tiny minority, along with the political and economical establishment are the officers and soldiers of the silent war waged against Lebanon.
They are the ones driving the country to self-destruct. They are the ones responsible of the political deadlock; they are the ones keeping the garbage crisis going and turning it into a weapon of mass health and ecological destruction; they are the ones raising the cost of living and refusing to increase wages accordingly; they are the ones impoverishing the vast majority of the Lebanese population and forcing so many of us to pack and leave.
And make no mistake; the refugee crisis is a blessing for these people. Cheap labor, precarious living situation, no legal rights, that’s exactly what they need to continue striving. Educated and free Lebanese citizens could endanger their never-ending theft of Lebanon’s riches. It’s better to force them to leave and replace them with a more obedient and fearful population.
Are they doing all this on their own or are they controlled by one or several foreign powers following some obscure agenda? The answer to that question is at this point irrelevant. One can endlessly speculate and throw hypothesis around, but the situation is too dire to waste time indulging in conspiracy theories.
Lebanese, regardless of their religion, sect or political affiliations, are losing the war. Have they surrendered or are they willing to resist as they did so many times in the past? That’s the only question worth answering today.