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Economic Crisis

More than half of Lebanon’s migrant workers need help: UN

Workers In Lebanon under the kafala, or "sponsorship," system who have lost their jobs and homes due to the economic crisis wait outside the Ethiopian Embassy in Beirut (Credit: AFP)

BEIRUT — More than half of Lebanon’s migrant workers are in need of “urgent humanitarian assistance” to survive an economic crisis that has plunged most of the population into poverty, the UN warned Tuesday.

The country of 6 million is in the throes of a financial downturn branded by the World Bank as one of the worst since the mid-19th century, with the local currency losing more than 90 percent of its value on the parallel market.

Seventy-eight percent of the country’s population now live in poverty, the UN Office for the Coordination of Humanitarian Affairs said last week — a proportion far higher than last year’s figure of around 55 percent.

Extreme poverty has reached an estimated 36 percent of the Lebanese population, OCHA said. 

The International Organization for Migration said Tuesday that migrant workers had been hit especially hard. 

“They have lost their jobs. They are hungry, they cannot access medical care and feel unsafe,” the UN agency’s Mathieu Luciano said.

“Many are so desperate that they want to leave the country, but they do not have the means to do so.”

According to the IOM, out of the 210,000 migrant workers living in Lebanon, around 120,000 are in need of humanitarian assistance.

Officially pegged at LL1,507.5 to the greenback, the Lebanese lira now sells for more than LL20,000 on the black market, sparking rapid inflation. 

This has eaten away at already low wages for migrant workers, preventing most from sending money back home.


BEIRUT — More than half of Lebanon’s migrant workers are in need of “urgent humanitarian assistance” to survive an economic crisis that has plunged most of the population into poverty, the UN warned Tuesday.

The country of 6 million is in the throes of a financial downturn branded by the World Bank as one of the worst since the mid-19th...