Lebanon’s new government asked to resume bailout talks with IMF

13 September 2021, 14:54

Members of the new government pose for an official picture at the Presidential Palace in Baabda, east of Beirut, Lebanon, on Monday (Dalati Nohra/Lebanese Official Government/AP)
Lebanon. Picture: PA

More than half the population now lives in poverty amid extended power outages and severe shortages in fuel and medicine.

Lebanon’s new government held its first meeting with a call by the president to resume talks with the International Monetary Fund to help kick-start its recovery from one of the world’s worst economic crises in more than a century.

The 24-member Cabinet’s most pressing mission over the coming weeks will be to help improve conditions in the country of six million, including a million Syrian refugees.

More than half the population now lives in poverty amid extended power outages and severe shortages in fuel and medicine.

President Michel Aoun told ministers during the Cabinet meeting that their government policy statement should include the resumption of talks with the IMF, which were suspended last year.

He also called for a plan to fight corruption and move forward with the investigation into last year’s massive explosion at Beirut’s port that killed at least 214 people, wounded over 6,000 others and damaged parts of the capital.

Footage of last year's blast in central Beirut (Karim Sokhn/AP)
Footage of last year’s blast in central Beirut (Karim Sokhn/AP)

The formation of a new government on Friday came after a 13-month deadlock, one of Lebanon’s longest periods without a fully functioning government at a time when the country was sliding deeper into financial chaos and poverty.

The country’s information minister George Kordahi told reporters after the meeting that prime minister Najib Mikati plans to hold intense cabinet meetings to work on improving matters that “have direct effects on citizens”.

Mr Kordahi quoted Mr Mikati, a billionaire businessman who served twice before as premier, as saying during the meeting that “people are looking for actions and are not concerned anymore about talks and promises”.

The country’s economic crisis, unfolding since 2019, has been described by the World Bank as one of the worst the world has witnessed since the mid-1800s.

Lebanon
Lebanese prime minister Najib Mikati, centre, shakes hands with officers from the government security forces (Hussein Malla/AP)

It impoverished more than half the population within months and left the national currency in a freefall, driving inflation and unemployment to unprecedented levels.

The government will have to manage public anger and tensions resulting from the lifting of fuel subsidies by the end of the month.

Lebanon’s foreign reserves have been running dangerously low and the central bank in the import-dependent country said it is no longer able to support its six billion US-dollar subsidy programme.

The cabinet set up a committee to draft a government policy statement that will be discussed in parliament before a vote of confidence is held.

The government has faced criticism by many even before it started work as most of its ministers, although they include experts, were handpicked by the same political groups blamed for the corruption that led to the economic meltdown.

By Press Association

Latest World News

See more Latest World News

Emergency services attend the site

Building collapse in Italy kills two young siblings and their mother

Leader and the presidential candidate of National People’s Power Anura Kumara Dissanayake

Dissanayake wins Sri Lanka’s presidential election as voters reject old guard

People mill around damaged cars and debris

More than 20 hurt after Russian strike on Ukrainian apartment blocks

Mourners chant slogans as they carry the coffins of Hezbollah fighters who were killed in Friday’s Israeli strike,

Hezbollah declares ‘open-ended battle of reckoning’ with Israel

Miners and police officers gather around the site of a coal mine where methane leak sparked an explosion

Death toll rises after methane leak causes explosion at Iranian coal mine

Israeli security forces examine the site hit by a rocket fired from Lebanon, in Kiryat Bialik, northern Israel

Hezbollah fires more than 100 rockets across Israel as fears of war mount

Israel Palestinians Al Jazeera

Israel raids, shuts down Al Jazeera’s bureau in Ramallah in the West Bank

The Tabas mine in Iran

Dozens dead after explosion at coal mine in Iran, with more workers left trapped inside

Israel and Lebanon have been trading heavy fire in recent days

Israeli strikes 'hit 400 Hezbollah sites', as Lebanese militants return fire, after Beirut attack death toll rises to 45

Sri Lanka Presidential Election

Dissanayake leads early official vote count in Sri Lanka’s presidential election

UN General Assembly Security

New York interim police commissioner says federal authorities searched his homes

APTOPIX Lebanon Mideast Tensions

Hezbollah confirms more than a dozen operatives killed in Israeli strikes

APTOPIX Indonesia New Zealand Kidnapped Pilot

Kiwi pilot freed after 19 months in rebel captivity in Indonesia’s Papua region

Haiti Kenya

Kenyan president visits Haiti as part of international effort to fight gangs

Black and white photo of Kathryn Crosby and Bing Crosby

Kathryn Crosby, actress and widow of Oscar-winner Bing Crosby, dies aged 90

Lebanon Mideast Tensions

Death toll from Israeli air strike on Beirut rises to 37