Lebanon’s silent crisis

Lebanon’s silent crisis

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Will there be a 'red line' for Israel's annexation of the West Bank?

Israel’s recent change of land-buying policies in the occupied West Bank has been condemned by the international community and the UN. The measures have been designed to make it easier for settlers to acquire Palestinian land in areas that until now had been under the Palestinian ...  Show more

Is it time for serious reform of the UN and humanitarian law?

The rules-based international order is the system of principles, laws and institutions put in place since the end of the Second World War to protect human rights and prevent conflict. But this status quo has been challenged by the past two years of wars and serious breaches of in ...  Show more

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How Lebanon’s economy collapsed
The Explanation

Protests, power cuts and bank hold-ups – Lebanon was already struggling before the 2020 port explosion that devasted its capital, Beirut, but now it’s in a desperate economic collapse. The Lebanese people are struggling to buy basic food and medicine. And the country also hosts t ...  Show more

Liban, le naufrage
Focus

"Le Liban, c’est le Titanic, mais sans l’orchestre" La formule est de Jean-Yves Le Drian, le ministre français des affaires étrangères. Et elle résume à elle seule ce Liban qui sombre, qui s’enfonce inexorablement dans la crise. Une crise multiple : politique, économique, sociale ...  Show more

Leaving Lebanon
From Our Own Correspondent

Lebanon has suffered not just a catastrophic blast that cost around two hundred lives, but also a devastating economic crisis. The value of the currency has plunged and the pandemic lockdown forced nearly a third of businesses to close, leaving thousands jobless. Is Lebanon now a ...  Show more

What’s gone wrong in Lebanon?
The Inquiry

The massive explosion that tore through Beirut on August 4th left more than 200 people dead, 6,000 injured, and as many as 300,000 homeless. The explosion was caused by a fire that ignited 2,750 tons of ammonium nitrate stored at the port. When the blast hit, Lebanon was already ...  Show more