Search
Search

Fuel Subsidies

Parliament to discuss fuel crisis on Friday

Parliament will convene on Friday to discuss what to do about a fuel crisis that has brought much of the country to a halt and sparked deadly violence. (Credit: João Sousa/L’Orient Today)

BEIRUT — Parliament will convene on Friday to discuss what to do about a fuel crisis that has brought much of the country to a halt and sparked deadly violence.

Speaker Nabih Berri called the session to discuss “appropriate action” over crippling fuel shortages, a crunch point in a two-year financial meltdown that marks Lebanon’s worst crisis since the 1975–90 Civil War.

A rocket-propelled grenade was fired near a Beirut petrol station during a dispute over gasoline, a security source said. Gunmen opened fire on soldiers who had detained a man who tried to fill his car by force. The station caught fire.

The steadily worsening fuel crisis has hit a low in the past week, with power blackouts forcing some hospitals, bakeries and businesses to scale down or close.

A senior United Nations official said water supplies and essential health services were threatened, warning of a humanitarian catastrophe. “A bad situation only stands to get worse unless an instant solution is found,” said Najat Rochdi, the UN humanitarian coordinator for Lebanon.

Last week, the central bank announced it could no longer finance imports of gasoline and diesel at heavily discounted exchange rates, effectively ending a subsidy scheme that promises to increase prices sharply.

Banque du Liban Gov. Riad Salameh has been at odds with the government over the move, as the government says it should have been done only after the provision of prepaid cash cards for the poor.

Salameh has said he can resume subsidizing imports only if a law is passed allowing him to dip into the mandatory reserves.

The crisis has sparked a renewed push by Lebanon’s squabbling politicians to agree on a cabinet that can start tackling the financial crisis, which has depressed the currency by more than 90 percent.

“We still have a few meters left in the race, but God willing we are sorting it out appropriately,” Prime Minister-designate Najib Mikati said after meeting with President Michel Aoun on Tuesday.

Despite soaring poverty, Lebanon’s ruling elite has failed to form a new cabinet since Prime Minister Hassan Diab quit after last year’s devastating Beirut port explosion.

The past week has seen repeated violence at gas stations. At least 28 people were killed in northern Lebanon over the weekend when a fuel tanker exploded as people rushed to get a share.

Suggesting some subsidized imports were continuing, the TV stations MTV and Al-Jadeed said the central bank had approved financing for two diesel shipments at the subsidized rate of LL3,900 lira to the US dollar, compared with the parallel market rate of LL18,500 to the greenback on Tuesday.

The central bank did not immediately respond to a request for comment from Reuters.

The channels reported that the bank did not approve financing for a gasoline shipment on the same terms.

Hassan Nasrallah, the head of the Iran-backed Hezbollah group, said on Sunday it would begin bringing diesel and gasoline from Iran with delivery dates to be announced soon.

BEIRUT — Parliament will
convene on Friday to discuss what to do about a fuel crisis that
has brought much of the country to a halt and sparked deadly
violence.
Speaker Nabih Berri called the session to discuss “appropriate action” over crippling fuel shortages, a crunch
point in a two-year financial meltdown that marks Lebanon’s
worst crisis since the...