34 Middle East & Africa TheEconomistAugust 8th 2020
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turetookflight.Anestimated300,000peo-
ple,nearly5%ofthecountry’spopulation,
were left homeless by the blast. Some
foundshelterwithfamilyorfriends.Oth-
ershadnowheretogo.Theysweptbroken
glassofftheirfurnitureandbeddeddown
forthenightinflatswithoutwindowsor
doorsorelectricity.Thecitylookednobet-
terthenextmorning.Workerswithbrooms
sweptupglassuntilitoverfloweddump-
stersandpiledinheapsonthekerb.Pedes-
trianslookedupnervouslyastheywalked,
lestfallingdebrislandontheirheads.
Repairingthedamagewouldbea tallor-
deringoodtimes.Thesearenotgoodtimes
inLebanon.Theeconomyhasallbutcol-
lapsed since October. Its currency, the
pound, had beenpegged for decades at
1,500tothedollar.Butthecountryhasrun
shortofdollarstomaintainthepegandfi-
nanceitsyawningtradedeficit.Itcanno
longersustaina years-longPonzischeme
thatsawthecentralbank(BanqueduLi-
ban,orbdl) borrowdollarsfromcommer-
cialbanksinexchangeforabove-market
interestpayments.Thepoundnowtrades
atmorethan8,000ontheblackmarket,an
80%devaluationfromtheofficialrate.The
government defaulted on its debts in
Marchforthefirsttimeinhistory.
FormostLebaneselifehasbecome a
seemingly endless succession of crises.
Consumerpricesarerisingby90%a year
andby246%forfood.A500-gramjarof
Nescafécancost10%ofthemonthlymini-
mumwage;a kiloofbeefgoesfor15%.The
armystoppedservingmeattosoldiersto
cutcosts. OnJune30ththegovernment
raisedbreadpricesbya third,thefirstin-
creaseina decade.Halfthecountrynow
livesbelow thepoverty line,and three-
quartersmayneedaidbyyear’send.
Fuelshortageshaveledtointerminable
midsummerblackouts:powercutsinBei-
rut,normallythreehoursa day,stretched
upto 20 hoursinJuly.Back-upgenerators
ranoutofdieselorbrokedownfromover-
use,leavingmanyLebaneseinhot,dark
apartments.Ogero,thestatetelecomsmo-
nopoly,haswarnedofinternetoutagesif it
cannotpoweritsinfrastructure.Themain
publichospitaltreatingcovid-19patients
hadtoshutwardsandturnoffair-condi-
tioners because of the black-outs. Petty
crimewasalreadyontherise,evenbefore
theexplosionthatleftthousandsofapart-
mentsopentointruders.Onemanheldup
a pharmacyatgunpoint—fornappies.An-
otherrobbeda pedestrian,thencameback
toapologise,sayingheneededthecashto
feedhisfamily.
Thegovernment,installedinJanuary,
wasmeanttobeatechnocraticonethat
wouldtackletheeconomiccrisis.It hasac-
complishedalmostnothing.Afterthede-
faultitaskedtheimffora financialagree-
mentworthupto$10bn.Severalmonths
and 20 meetingslaterthereisnoprogress
towardsadeal—becauseLebanonisstill
negotiatingwithitself.
The cabinet and the parliament are
bickeringaboutthesizeofthefinancial
sector’slosses.In aneconomicplan re-
leasedinApril,thegovernmentestimated
a netlossof154trnpoundsbetweenthebdl
andcommercialbanks.(Theplanoptimis-
ticallyenvisionsanexchangerateof3,500
poundstothedollar.)Thatwasthestarting
pointfortalkswiththeimf. Butthecoun-
try’sbankersarefuriousaboutthegovern-
mentplan,whichwouldcleanupbalance-
sheetsbywipingoutshareholdersandthe
largestdepositors.Theyreleasedtheirown
accountingthat estimateslosses atless
thanhalftheofficialfigure,largelythanks
toan evenmore unrealisticestimateof
Lebanon’sfutureexchange rate.“It’sthe
samekindoffinancialwizardrythatgotus
intothismess,”saysHenriChaoul,a for-
merfinancialadvisertothegovernment.
MrChaoulresignedinJuneinprotest
overtheimpasse.Theimfisstilltalking
withthecabinet:theyhelda meetingon
July10thfocusedontheelectricitysector.
Butthefundhaswarnedthatnegotiations
canprogressonlyif Lebanonagreesonone
setofnumbers,orifthecabinetpushes
throughafewmeaningful reforms asa
showofgoodfaith.Neitherhashappened.
“It’scriminal,”saysAlainBifani,a former
director-generalof thefinanceministry,
whoalsoquithisjobinprotest.
Addtothis,now,thedevastationofthe
Lebanesecapital.Damageattheportalone
willcosthundredsofmillionsofdollarsto
fix.Among thebuildingsdestroyedwas
Lebanon’s main grain silo, leaving the
countrywithlessthana month’ssupplyof
wheat.Homeownerswonderhowtheywill
findthecashtopayfornewglassorforalu-
miniumwindowframes.Businessowners,
barelyekingouta profitbeforethedisaster,
saytheywillcallitquitsratherthanre-
build.Thegovernmentpledgedtoinvesti-
gate,andtofindtheculpritswithinfive
days—enoughtimetonamea scapegoat,
butnottoconducta seriousinquiry.
Thereisrageinthestreets,butalsores-
ignation.Lebanonhasenduredmuchinits
modernhistory:acivilwarfrom 1975 to
1990,occupationsbyIsraelandSyria,a ru-
inouswarwithIsraelin2006,andmyriad
otherconflictsandattacks.TheLebanese
pridedthemselvesontheirabilitytopick
themselvesupandrebuildtheirsociety.
This moment feels different. The eco-
nomicmodelhasfailed;sotoothepower-
sharing systemthat kept the peace be-
tweenthecountry’sreligionsafterthecivil
war.Asthecountrysinks,itsvenalpolitical
classseemsoblivious. Goneistheopti-
mismofOctober,whenhundredsofthou-
sandsofLebanesetooktothestreetstode-
mand the overthrow of an entrenched
regime.Nowtheirthoughtsareturningin-
creasinglytoemigration. 7
“W
eareprotestingfor Mali,” says
CheickOumar Kanté on the streets
ofBamako,thecapital, “because Mali is on
theroadtoextinction.” Since June 5th tens
ofthousandshavetaken part in demon-
strationsorganisedby a group of opposi-
tion leaders calledthe m5-rfp and bol-
stered by the moral authority of a
charismaticimam,Mahmoud Dicko. The
protestershavebeen complaining angrily
about the growing jihadist insurgency,
Mali’sdireeconomyand recent dodgy elec-
tions.“Nothingworks in this country any
more,”saysOusmane Dembele, a demon-
strator.Theirmaindemand is for President
IbrahimBoubacarKeïta to resign.
Thegovernment’s response has lurched
between concessions and violence. The
protestshadbeenlargely peaceful until the
weekendofJuly10th, when security forces
firedonthecrowds,killing at least 11 people
andwounding85.Protesters lit fires in the
NationalAssemblybuilding and occupied
thestatetelevisionpremises. After a truce
for the Muslim holiday of Eid al-Adha,
protestshavebeenstarting up again.
Westerngovernments are nervous too,
sinceMaliisatthecore of Europe’s fight
againstjihadistsinthe Sahel. France has
5,100troopsinthisfragile region; in 2012 it
intervenedwhenjihadists almost toppled
Mali’sgovernment.France’s allies, includ-
ingAmerica, Britain and Germany, have
alsosentforces,some in a contingent of
BAMAKO
Regionalleadersare struggling to
mediateinMali
Mali
Fearandloathing
intheSahel
Anger in Bamako