Wednesday, August 5, 2020

REPATRIATION FLIGHT BEING SENT TO LEBANON, FOREIGN MINISTRY SAYS

Cyprus Mail 5 August 2020 - by Jonathan Shkurko

Firefighters spray water at a fire in Beirut

No casualties have been reported so far among Cypriots in Beirut from the huge blast, but some homes and businesses have been destroyed, a representative of the community said on Wednesday.

With over 2,000 nationals permanently residing in Lebanon, Cyprus is one of the most represented communities in the Middle Eastern country.

The president of the Cyprus Community in Lebanon, Stalo Habibi, who has lived in Beirut for the past 27 years and who was there at the time of the explosion, called the blast an absolute catastrophe for a country that was already going through a very difficult time.

The massive warehouse explosion, which was felt as far away as Cyprus, sent a devastating blast wave across Beirut, killing at least 100 people and injuring nearly 4,000. Officials said the toll was expected to rise after the blast at port warehouses that stored highly explosive material.

“The damage produced by the blast is incalculable,” Habibi told Cyprus Mail. “Beirut needs help and needs it now.”

Habibi said she had a phone conversation with Foreign Minister Nicos Christodoulides on Wednesday morning, during which coordinated rescue actions were discussed.

“The Cypriot embassy in Beirut (only three kilometres away from the port where the blast took place) has also been extensively damaged, so we are trying to do the best we can to help our citizens in Beirut. We are in a situation of absolute emergency; we have never experienced such a thing before.”

Habibi added that, so far, there are no casualties among the Cypriot community in Beirut after the blast, with only three people suffering light injuries.

“However, many houses and apartments where Cypriots live have been destroyed, not to mention their businesses. It will take years to repair that damage caused by the blast.

“Our association is practically acting as a link between the foreign ministry in Cyprus and the Cypriots living in Beirut, as we pass them on all the information we receive from home.”

Meanwhile, the ministry of foreign affairs has announced that a flight repatriating Cypriot citizens and permanent residents to the island from Lebanon has been scheduled for Thursday.

According to the announcement, those who wish to fly to Cyprus need to register on the government portal at www.connect2cy.gov.cy  until 10pm on Wednesday, stating their intention to return to Cyprus, or otherwise to contact the foreign ministry at 22801000.

Furthermore, the Cyprus police confirmed they will also send two helicopters to Beirut on Wednesday.

Five firefighters and eight specially trained policemen with rescue dogs will help dig through the rubble looking for survivors following the blast.

The Lebanese ambassador to Cyprus Claude El Hajal has also said medical equipment will be sent to Beirut from the island.

“We are in constant contact with the ministry of foreign affairs of Cyprus. What happened is a huge disaster. I received a phone call from Mr Christodoulides and he said the government is ready to offer assistance to Lebanon in any way.

“We need medical equipment and medicines and, from what I understand, a flight carrying supplies will arrive in Beirut from Larnaca on Thursday.”

El Hajal also said that Lebanon is in need of trained dogs and rescue teams to try find the injured under the rubble, something he also conveyed to the Cypriot authorities.

“Cyprus is ready to help us. At the moment, the most urgent things we need are medical supplies,” he said.

The explosion was the most powerful ever to rip through Beirut, a city still scarred by civil war three decades ago and reeling from an economic meltdown and a surge in coronavirus infections.

President Michel Aoun said 2,750 tonnes of ammonium nitrate, used in fertilisers and bombs, had been stored for six years at the port without safety measures. He called it “unacceptable”.

Cypriot President Nicos Anastasiades expressed his condolences to Lebanon. In a message to the people of Lebanon on Twitter, Anastasiades said: “We hope and pray for the speedy recovery of the injured people.”

He also gave his condolences to all the families of the people who died in the Beirut explosion.

“We stand ready to provide any assistance deemed necessary.”

Cypriots in need of help in Beirut are also asked to communicate with the Crisis Management Centre of the ministry at 99-660129 or with the Embassy in Lebanon at +9613572139.

Those who wish to donate money to the relief fund can do so at https://www.justgiving.com/crowdfunding/lebanon-relief?utm_term=re7R78DA2.