With no discernible forward motion and no convincing desire for creation of a reform government being exhibited by the parties to Lebanon’s latest and most severe political vacuum, the year to date has been
largely void of options. Generally it offered people from the humble worker to the most resourceful entrepreneur two choices: succumb to despair over lack of electricity, lack of money, lack of national political will and leadership, and rail against their unjust fate, or construct, with all mental resources, a space where awareness of this country’s assets of human and social capital creates realistic hope and practical economic solutions. Executive has had no choice in the matter. This magazine’s identity is based on the cognition of the real assets of Lebanon and on the idea of activating these assets for the economic and social good of the country and its people. Thus it was our ordained path to cross over barriers of international collaboration and engage in a mutually beneficial partnership with the United States Agency for International Development (USAID) on the opportunity to organize a journalistic project focused on employment creation and productivity improvement in five select industries. If there is such a thing as journalistic predestination, that was it. The project, strategically aligned with our Executive Economic Roadmap vision of the past five years, was twice fortuitous. It enhanced our roadmap concept by adding emphasis on practical ventures that can serve as models for success under duress. It delivered also a perfect fit with Executive’s new community model of inclusion of business leaders, future leaders, and dynamic stakeholders. Aligned with the thought platform of Executive’s new business strategy and allocation of our precious human capital, the project of the five industry roundtables was kicked off in February. Its entailed the diligent selection of a steering committee (SC) of experts and thought leaders, and a foundational meeting where our consultative approach determined the five industries the project would focus on. The SC discussed industries from luxury fashion to waste recycling, from traditionally under-reputed and financially non-profit maximizing ventures in communication and media to obvious choices of exportable products and exportable concepts.
When the roundtables convened on March 30 and 31, the first outcome was an affirmation. Although it is no
secret that Lebanon has a wide diversity of finance and investment experts, consultants and industrial practitioners, the energy that these experts invested into the roundtable deliberations left behind an almost
giddy assurance the these dynamic stakeholders in the private sector economy are not just knowledgeable and experienced but also dedicated to constructing a better economy. The valiant efforts of these roundtable participants to discuss constructively demonstrated their readiness to inquire about uncommon opportunities and to challenge their own positions and preconceived notions. A second result of the deliberations was that industries appeared to have as yet underused potential for coordination in the current crisis. At every roundtable, the discussants addressed the same challenges from gaining market access to absence of productive government interaction and finding the right finance model. Executive gained the impression that such cross-sectorial collaboration – perhaps with involvement of a supra-industrial steering and evaluation mechanism – could be unleashed with even more efficiency if pooling of plans across the five diverse industries was augmented by developing and monitoring a coherent policy on environmental, social, and governance as well as finance (ESGF). As a third conclusion and implication of untapped potential, the roundtable discussions have hinted at vertical and horizontal opportunities of supply chain development and innovative pairings of industries for mutual benefits. Local industries that in the past did not withstand the pressures of de-facto subsidization of imported goods have opportunities to explore. One could even make a case to pursue external lessons from in geography and size distant producers. Wine insights, such as the impact of fake products on the reputation of Austrian wine and the uneven boost triggered by the Argentinian economic collapse of 2002 for that country’s makers, or the difficulty of Lebanese content creators to compete in Arab markets against massively state-funded production houses, seem to hold many lessons that are not yet exploited. In this context, it is in order to add observe the experience of Executive Magazine with new publishing entrepreneurship: adaptation to the new models under preservation of our journalistic virtues has been a challenge until the economic crisis and the drying up of retail channels for print magazines coerced us to open up to the challenges. This project made the magazine break new ground as part of our response to the
economic crisis and challenges for journalism, wherein the overall adaptation of our business model in the
recent past has involved a retooling of our organization. Roles like customer care, community building, and sponsor outreach, were redrawn from previous emphases on distribution, circulation, and public relations. Roles in digital outreach and technology adaptation were newly filled or expanded. On the editorial and general management layer, Executive applied its ethical policy to new partnership and sponsorship concepts, in addition to tackling the new community building program of the Executive Circle, driven by fundamental agreement that this program will reach far beyond a marketing ruse or subscription campaign. The powerful show horses of industry and entrepreneurship are running up against triple-bar oxers as soon as they enter the Lebanese economy arena. These oxers comprise ascending obstacles of bureaucratic red tape, partisan self-interests, and ego-barriers. Flashback: a mental tug of war has been raging in Lebanon for a year. National rescue through reform and economic restructuring was the rope. Everyone was pulling on it. As with every tug of war, the game plan did not allow for a win-win outcome, and so the most concerned parties were dedicating all their efforts in order to win this competition. “The only way out [of economic free fall] is to regain the trust of the Lebanese people and the international community together, and to refuel and rebuild an economy living on productive and high added-value sectors,” argued one year ago the then government of Hassan Diab who was pulling to win from the angle of a forceful restructuring that put the blame and shame for the Lebanese crisis on the financial sector and proposed to save the country by means of state-induced focus on productive forces in the economy. The private sector party most-at-risk from the government plan was the banking industry. Diametrically opposed to the government’s attempt, the industry pulled just as hard as the government. “Lebanon is a cash-poor but asset-rich country that owns assets worth well in excess of what is needed to restore financial stability,” the Association of Banks in Lebanon argued in its proposal for national rescue. It took the perspective of blaming the crisis on irresponsible government spending but largely sought to absolve the financial sector from blame and concentrate on a solution that would keep banking power intact and allocate the reform burden differently, away from a forced banking restructuring. Whereas a win-win solution is not coded into a tug-of-war, one other outcome, besides win-lose, is a lose lose scenario when the rope snaps. The rope of any orderly plan for national rescue snapped first when the pandemic disrupted the nation with a few hundred daily infections, and then, much more violently, when the
criminality of the negligent governance “system” of wasta-cracy in Beirut Port shook the capital with the mother of all blasts and then with the resignation of the Diab cabinet. Thus, the Lebanese will never know if either rescue plan could have kept its promises. This 2020 season story of a doomed plan for national recovery is the most shocking of many cautionary tales in the annals of Lebanese plans. Only about two years
prior, another of those painful lessons on the vanity of politically induced plans for the Lebanese economy was provided with the delivery of a million-dollar plan called Lebanon Economic Vision commissioned by the Ministry of Economy to consultancy McKinsey for a very proud amount. By the time this plan was debated
from its revealed power-point slides, the first milestone targets in its design had already passed. And
so forth. Plans, all the way back to the Horizon 2000 vision in the 1990s, have a habit of becoming old before
they become real. But inaction is not an option for Lebanon’s economic actors. Surviving this polity is on one
hand a miracle of the people’s solidarity and ability to function while under attack from all sides, from patronizing foreign politicians and self-interested diplomatic aggressors, from pontificating neocolonial activists that sell their intrusions into Lebanese life as civil society interventions, local elites that dream of living in the 18th century, and a gun-happy bomber of civilization that has held onto power for too many decades.
The Lebanese are currently subjected to depreciation, with the ever-rising prices of goods and services, self-imposed limits on withdrawals by banks at a rate of LBP 3,900 to the dollar, and a local currency estimated at LBP 9,600 to the dollar as at March 1st 2021. Rampant inflation was estimated at 84.8 percent for the full year 2020 according to the Central Statistics Department, with end-of-year inflation from December 2019 to December 2020 estimated at 14.8 percent. Additionally, any release of controls for withdrawals in LBP would result in added inflation due to an expansion of the monetary mass and a rush to buy USD currency at black market rates. The depreciation of the currency reflects, in part, a loss of confidence in the national currency, and a flight to safer cash currencies on the black market. In light of this situation, some financial experts have recommended the establishment of a currency board (CB) in Lebanon to help tackle inflation.
Broadly defined, a currency board is an authority in charge of managing the money supply and the exchange rate of a country’s currency, in lieu of the central bank. Its tasks are set by law, and no printing of the currency can occur without it being 100 percent backed by another foreign currency, in most cases the US dollar as the worldwide preferred medium of exchange. Unlike a typical central bank, it is not a last-resort lender and is not legally allowed to print currency and lend to the government under any circumstance.
Under a CB management, the exchange rate and the monetary level are determined independently by the board, who is ruled by law and, due to its direct task, is less likely to be under political pressure. CBs often have a 100 percent reserve requirement, therefore a specific unit of foreign currency must back every unit of currency printed. For someone to obtain a fixed amount of LBP, they must ask their bank to convert dollars at the CB. Thanks to a stable foreign-currency-backed fixed exchange rate, CBs allow fighting inflation more effectively.
Overall, more than 70 countries have adopted currency boards, most notably Hong Kong, Estonia, Bulgaria, and Denmark amongst others. In the case of Estonia, the institution of a currency board in 1992 helped end hyperinflation, with monthly inflation falling from 80 percent in early 1992 to only 3.3 percent in December of the same year.
Determining a fixed exchange rate
The question is: How would this be implemented? In an exclusive interview for executive Magazine, Professor Steve Hanke, the main proponent of the CB for Lebanon, recommended freezing all printing of Lebanese currency for a month, in order to lower the supply of LBP, which would drive down the price of the USD in the black market, a recommendation echoed by Dr. Patrick Mardini, head of the Lebanese Institute for Market Studies. In this situation, market forces would determine the rate.
This new fixed rate, unlike a currency peg, would not rely on the trust and credibility of a central bank in managing the money supply, as it would be 100 percent backed by reserves. “Developing countries don’t have the proper institutional framework to protect the Central Bank from government interference,” says Dr. Mardini. According to him, in a CB system, the currency in circulation grows in the presence of capital inflows, and if a person wishes to send their money abroad they would have to give their LBP to the CB, which would take them out of circulation, in exchange for providing an amount of USD in reserves. Such a CB would only require a law to be implemented to modify the Lebanese Code of Money and Credit, noting that such model-laws do exist, including one that has been drafted by Professor Hanke.
This is in contrast to the opinion of Jean Riachi, Chairman and Chief Executive Officer at FFA Private Bank. In his opinion, the problem with the peg is its inability to adjust to external conditions, deeming the fixed rate of the CB as similar to that of the dollar peg at LBP 1,500. “It’s just another peg, which has cost the Lebanese economy a lot,” he says. Indeed, fluctuations of currencies permit adjustments to changing economic conditions: for example, deficits in trade balances result in devaluations in order to limit imports and favor exports of goods and services. Riachi believes that “we were pegged when we needed more flexibility to export and produce,” as the LBP peg to the dollar was deemed to be overvalued and therefore made Lebanon expensive, causing it to lose any competitive edge.
Impact on inflation
The implementation of CBs has been deemed by many economists a success in fighting inflation. Imposing a 100 percent foreign reserves guarantee for local currencies succeeded in ending hyperinflation entirely in some countries: in 1997, Bulgaria’s CB ended hyperinflation in just one month.
Nevertheless, this requires effective governance and trust in institutions. “You need very strong governance to sustain it; you need fiscal discipline,” says Riachi. On the other hand, the opinion of economists supporting such an implementation is that the framework, which is backed by law, is enough to support trust in such a system, as the CB would not be allowed to print any amount of local currency if it doesn’t have the equivalent amount in USD in its reserves.The CB would be free from political interference and, for example, would not be allowed to lend the government to finance its budget deficits (this would be done either through taxes or through issuing debt on the financial markets).
In principle, implementing a CB would result in added foreign investments and therefore reserves: currently, the Central Bank of Lebanon (BDL) holds around USD 17.5 million in reserves, while it has around LBP 55 trillion in bank deposits and LBP 30 trillion in currency in circulation. At this level, the foreign currency reserves would serve as an anchor in order to cover such amounts in LBP. Any additional surplus from abroad in USD would allow for an expansion of the monetary base without any inflation, as it would be backed by USD reserves. It is worth noting that implementing a CB in Bulgaria quadrupled foreign reserves in a matter of 12 months between 1997 and 1998 thanks to an influx of foreign investments (wishing to take advantage of arbitrage possibilities, which will be addressed below).
As a consequence, inflation levels would drop dramatically. It should be noted though, that in the case of Bulgaria, Estonia, and others in the former Soviet bloc, the CB has been adopted in the aftermath of Soviet management. In the case of Lebanon, this would occur after a long tradition of laissez-faire economics that had been aggravated by corruption and infective governance: while for the former soviet republic countries, the adoption of a CB was perceived internationally as a sign of willingness to engage in reforms, in the case of Lebanon it could appear as one last attempt to stall the necessary reforms by solving one issue only, which is inflation; it is therefore less certain that this would result in additional trust in Lebanon’s economic governance.
Impact on public finances
A CB is forbidden by law to loan the central government and/or to cover its deficits by printing money. Nevertheless, outflows of USD dollars would result in a lesser amount of LBP and therefore might impact the public sector: the government would have to revise its budget, which would result in a contraction of the economy. According to Riachi, the timing is wrong, “I don’t think we can have a balanced budget on the short to medium term”. Indeed, the current state of the economic crisis in Lebanon, with GDP projected to contract heavily, makes it difficult for the Lebanese government to balance its budget. On the other hand, should an inflow of foreign capital occur, the money supply in Lebanon would expend and therefore allow for the government to meet its expenditures as government revenue from taxes will increase due to inflows allowing for more bank lending and would therefore stimulate the economy. The questions remain nevertheless: why would this currency stability result in massive inflows of foreign capital?
Impact on foreign investments: arbitrage solution
The idea of arbitrage entails that a fixed rate in Lebanon would result in lower interest rates, in principle, as the currency would be interchangeable at the CB with US dollars. Nevertheless, the LBP interest rate would still be higher than its USD counterpart as interest rates incorporate political risk, sovereign debt risk, and others, which are higher than those of the United States. Therefore, due to low interest rates offered on the USD in international markets, holders of dollars would want to deposit money in LBP to take advantage of higher interest rates. Unlike the practices of the last years in Lebanon, the LBP would be fully backed by the dollar.
According to Mardini, USD interest rates would be lower than in past years but higher than overseas ones, therefore investors would be interested in taking advantage of this by depositing their dollars in Lebanon and exchanging them for LBPs.
Because of this, banks would be able to lend money in LBP and this would jumpstart the private sector thanks to lower rates and more liquidity in the Lebanese economy. Still, political factors in Lebanon, including geopolitical risk and lack of reforms, and limited trust in political institutions, could dissuade some from investing their money. According to Riachi, “reality bites when it comes to confidence,” as confidence remains the main motor to attract long-term investments, and the main issue with the peg remains its lack of flexibility in adjusting to shocks, “being solid is an illusion, you need flexibility,” he says. In the case of Lebanon, a floating currency would adjust to economic shocks, whereas a peg would not).
Indeed, though the fixed rate thanks to a CB would be lower than the current official LBP 1,500 to the dollar rate, and could therefore stimulate exports, it would still remain fixed and therefore would not change according to laws of supply and demand. In addition, lack of trust in the Lebanese economic sector, especially after a year of inaction on the part of the political class, could result in outflows, which would impact the interest rates and result in higher rates, therefore there could be little impact on resuming lending. Indeed, were the CB able to attract capital at a lower rate than typical Lebanese rates, the private sector would profit from a boost thanks to lower lending rates. If interest rates were to remain the same, additional inflows would have little impact on re-boosting the private sector.
Impact on the private sector
Should a CB be successfully implemented, lower rates than the typical rates of 8 to 9 percent on USD lending would be lowered, and this would in principle serve as a boost to the private sector. Business executives in Lebanon have long complained that high interest rates have had a negative impact on economic lending as it has discouraged investments due to the inability of businesses to make returns that would be high enough for them to service their debt. Lower interest would then permit more private sector lending.
In addition, this would result in banks getting back to diversifying their lending portfolio more in favor of private enterprise and allow for returns. The trade deficit would therefore be reduced as a fixed rate would be lower than the current peg and therefore favor exports. On the other hand, should this result in outflows from Lebanese willing to exchange their LBP notes to dollars, a consequence would be more pressure on the governmental budget due to difficulties in levying taxes: less activity would result in less profit and therefore less tax revenue for the state.
A limited solution?
Overall, the implementation of a CB would, in theory, help end the threat of hyperinflation in Lebanon, and attract foreign capital that would allow banks to lend to the productive economy. This would be accompanied by larger investments, and with a rate lower than LBP 1,500 to the dollar, promote Lebanese exports.
International investors would, again in theory, also be interested in acquisitions due to a productive and now cheaper (due to the devaluation) workforce. But this solution would seem in principle limited to the extent that it would solve hyperinflation alone, and reforms would still need to be implemented to help restructure the sovereign debt and the banking sector, and also help improve transparency and limit corruption. After years of eroding the confidence of the populace in their government and political class, Lebanon, indeed, does not suffer only from enormous inflation, but also from public deficits, an ever-growing public sector resulting in more currency printing and inflation, budget deficits, perception of extreme corruption, and a dearth of trust in the state.
With regards to the banking sector losses, an inflow of foreign capital would allow banks, in the long run, to lend again in LBP and therefore to stimulate the economy and make profits again. This would in theory help reduce the losses of the banking sector, though Mardini believes that it is only a stepping-stone that would provide stability, not excluding other necessary reforms. “Bankers can become bankers again,” says Mardini, “that’s how the CB solved the banking crisis in Bulgaria.” In the case of Bulgaria, banks were deemed insolvent but were able to repay their losses once they started making money.
Though controversial, the issue of instituting a CB in Lebanon is gaining ground. For example, Member of Parliament Paula Yacoubian has submitted, in June of 2020, a draft-law in parliament that would allow for the establishment of a CB.
Still, it is not deemed to be a miracle solution that would rid Lebanon of its economic difficulties. Even if it were successfully implemented and hyperinflation thus avoided, and with investment inflows pouring in, Lebanon’s government will still have to institute the necessary reforms that have been a key demand of civil society groups, non-governmental organizations, and international financial institutions. Lebanon still suffers from a lack of trust in institutions, lack of transparency in governance, and massive corruption.
The implementation of a CB in Lebanon could occur, but overall, there is doubt as to its attractiveness due to the lack of effective and transparent governance in Lebanese institutions, which may deter foreign investments even if the CB’s institutional framework could in principle be effective and transparent. Another risk is the implementation of a CB in name only as was the case in Argentina from 1991 to 2002: though called a CB, it had the authority to use its reserves in a discretionary manner and to lend the state, which resulted in an economic crisis and the suspension of the convertibility of Pesos to USD.
Overall, Lebanon appears short on viable alternatives, given that already much time has been wasted where the exchange rate problem and inflation pressures have been allowed to fester. A floating peg, whereby the Central Bank or the treasury reassesses the value of the peg periodically and then changes the peg rate accordingly, has also been on the table, though it remains difficult to assess whether this will require a hike in interest rates in order to stabilize it . Digitization of the dollars held in banks has been discussed but has been deemed a limited option, as it would not be a freely transferable currency. Reforms would take time and there is a sense of urgency with regards to tackling Lebanon’s woes, which call for solutions that would be implemented quickly. The final lacking element is simple: trust, and whether or not a CB would help restore trust from a monetary perspective is still subject to debate.
Parents and relatives of the victims of the Beirut port blast staged a spontaneous protest near the Courts of Justice in Adlieh in the evening of February 18th 2020 to express their anger and frustration at the recusal of Judge Fadi Sawan from the investigation earlier in the day, a decision condemned by both human rights activists who denounced perceived political interference in the judiciary process and the parents of the victims who still cry out for justice more than 6 months after the blast.
The recusal of Judge Sawan is expected to further delay the investigation to uncover the parties responsible for the presence of the ammonium nitrate inside the port and the explosion that left more than 200 dead, 6,000 wounded and thousands homeless.
On Sunday, February 14th 2021, began the pre-vaccination campaign organized by the Lebanese Ministry of Health for Lebanese medical personnel at the Rafic Hariri University Hospital, Saint Georges Hospital University Medical Center, and the American University of Beirut Medical Center (AUBMC), to be followed on Monday 15th by a general vaccination campaign for Lebanese citizens aged 65 years and more that have registered for the vaccine on the website of the Ministry of Health.
In the midst of Beirut’s beleaguered southern suburbs, statements for logic and reason, as well as empathis condemnations of terror and weapons, were solidified on this February 11, as clerics and dignitaries from Lebanon’s religious communities along with several foreign ambassadors joined with activists and family in the funeral of slain Lebanese filmmaker and fearless journalist Lokman Slim
Tripoli protests continued to be intense, on January 31, 2021, in Al Nour square. It started with the arrival of demonstrators from Beirut, and ended up with armored vehicles and the Lebanese army soldiers’ pursuit of a group of young demonstrators in the streets of Tripoli.
Executive’s faith in the Lebanese spirit of entrepreneurship remains strong. Despite compounded crises that have blocked foreign transactions, raised operational costs, and accelerated the migration of a skilled workforce, entrepreneurship in Lebanon continues to demonstrate its resilience, creative problem-solving, and untapped potential.
To reaffirm its support to entrepreneurship, Executive produced this video in collaboration with Konrad-Adenauer-Stiftung (KAS).
Tripoli protests January 28, 2021, in Al Nour square.
7:30 p.m.
Protesters have already set fire to one of the doors of Al Tell police station, Bechara El Khoury street. Tear gas grenades rain down from the roof of the building and the air is unbreathable.
Gas floods the adjacent streets for more than 2.5 hours, which did not prevent protesters from throwing Molotov cocktails at the police station.
10 p.m.
The army on the outskirts of the square decides to dislodge protesters by storming the square.
Driven from their place of protest, the demonstrators headed for the town hall of Tripoli, left unprotected, and ransacked and burned it.
11:00 p.m. The army arrives in front of the burning serial.
11:15 p.m. A fire truck arrives on the scene, but does not have sufficient water, so there is confusion and disorder before another fire truck arrives 20 minutes later.
We are looking for a new managing editor to help steer our coverage in the coming years and at this critical moment for Lebanon.
Role/Responsibilities:
- Oversee production of the monthly magazine from conception to print
- Coordinate with editorial staff on editorial agenda for each issue, agreeing on the focus and setting submission deadlines for articles
- Commission and liaise with outside contributors
- Fact check articles
- Ensure all articles are in line with our house style, and make any updates to house style if needed
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- Oversee communication and online dissemination strategy of content, including email marketing, Instagram, Facebook, Twitter and LinkedIn
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Essential:
- Fluency in English
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- The ability to work to deadline and manage and coordinate a small team
- Good understanding of Lebanese economic and policy issues
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Desired: - Fluency in spoken and written Arabic
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This is a full-time position based in Beirut, Lebanon. Salary is DoE.
DECEMBER 19
Parliamentary consultations take place. Mr. Hassan Diab is nominated to form a government, backed by the Amal movement, Hezbollah, the Free Patriotic Movement, the Marada and others.
DECEMBER 20-31
Heavy protests take place, protesting the nomination of Hassan Diab as Prime Minister.

JANUARY 14
Lebanese Protests resume after weeks of calm. Banks are heavily targeted as the focus of popular anger centers around the Lebanese banking sector. Roads are closed by protestors all around Lebanon.
JANUARY 16
Contrary to cabinet leaks circulating in the news, the formation of the government does not take place, without any explanation.

JANUARY 18
Clashes occur between protestors and the police, resulting in 400 wounded and 34 arrested. Protestors were dispersed by the police, the latter using teargas, water cannons, batons and rubber bullets, in violation of international conventions.
JANUARY 21
A new cabinet is formed. The government, essentially backed by the March 8 coalition and its allies, is heavily rejected and protestors go to the streets in a clear sign of rejection.
JANUARY 22
Clashes occur between the police and protestors outside the Lebanese parliament.
JANUARY 25
Crowds gather around Beirut to celebrate the 100th day of the Thawra, protestors demand for a complete overhaul of the Lebanese political system.
FEBRUARY 1
Protesters gather outside the US Embassy in rejection of US President Donald Trump’s Middle East Peace Plan.
FEBRUARY 5
Protests ongoing in refusal to recognize the new government.

FEBRUARY 6
In light of the financial crisis, the new government presents its plan to fight tax evasion and publishes a detailed policy paper in this regard.
FEBRUARY 11
Protests occur in light of the new government’s confidence vote. Protests become violent in front of parliament due to the police’s heavy use of batons, teargas and rubber bullets.
FEBRUARY 21
The 1st case of COVID-19 is confirmed in Beirut.
FEBRUARY 28
Lebanon bars all travel by non-residents by air, sea or land from countries worst hit by COVID-19. The Public Works Ministry named China, South Korea, Iran, and Italy as affected countries.
MARCH 8
Lebanon announces default on $1.2 billion Eurobond payment.
MARCH 10
The first COVID-19 related death is recorded.

APRIL 21
Ten people are killed in a shooting in the village of Baakline.
APRIL 22
Mazen Harfoush, the gunman in the Baakline shooting, is apprehended and confesses to his crimes.
MAY 31
Lebanon reaches 1,220 cases of Covid-19 infections
JULY 27
Exchange of fire between Israeli soldiers and four Hezbollah members, no escalation occurs.
AUGUST 4
An explosion in the port of Beirut kills 203 people, wounds thousands and results in 300,000 people losing their home

AUGUST 5
The government declares a two-week state of emergency following the explosions, effectively allowing the military a free hand in tackling the security situation.

AUGUST 6
French president Emmanuel Macron arrives in Beirut and visits the scene of the explosion and tours the damaged quarters in Beirut. He engages in discussions with residents of Beirut and calls for government reforms and anti-corruption measures. Macron declares that he would help gather international aid through an international summit with the European Union, Arabic countries and the USA, with such aid being conditional on the government implementing reforms. Protests break out as a popular anger is at an all-time high due to the blast. 16 port employees, accused of being connected to the explosion, are arrested according to the military court spokesman.
AUGUST 7
Lebanese officials declare that the victims of the explosion are numbered to 157 deaths and 5,000 wounded. The European Union releases emergency funds for aid amounting to $38 million. According to Boris Prokoshev, former captain of the ship that brought 2,750 tons of ammonium nitrate to Beirut, Lebanese authorities were “very well” aware of the risks of stocking the said amount in the Beirut port.

AUGUST 8
Protests occur all over Lebanon, with over 700 reportedly wounded and one policeman killed. Protestors storm through various official buildings, including the foreign ministry, as the crowds of protestors face police violence. Prime Minister Hassan Diab calls for new elections, while the 3 MPs of the Kataeb party resign.

AUGUST 9
Ministers Manal Abdel Samad and Demianos Kattar submit their resignations. International leaders join a donor conference by videoconference with the United Nations. France pledges nearly $300 million of direct assistance to the Lebanese population.
AUGUST 10
Prime Minister Hassan Diab announces that he and his cabinet’s resignation.

AUGUST 27
Clashes between Hezbollah and tribal members in the town of Khalde resulted in two deaths and ten wounded.
AUGUST 31
Lebanon reaches 17,308 cases of Covid-19 infections.
SEPTEMBER 8
Ali Hassan Khalil and Youssef Fenianos, two former ministers, are sanctioned by the US Treasury’ Office of Foreign Assets Control (OFAC).
OCTOBER 9
A fuel tanker explodes in Beirut, leaving at least four people dead and thirty injured. The blast occurred after the tank caught fire in the Tariq-al-Jdide district.

OCTOBER 14
A delegation led by Brigadier General Bassam Yassine launched talks facilitated by the United Nations and the United States with Israel over the disputed maritime border.
OCTOBER 22
Saad Hariri is charged with the formation of a new government.
NOVEMBER 6
Free Patriotic Movement leader Gebran Bassil is sanctioned under the Global Magnitsky Human Rights Accountability Act by the United States.
DECEMBER 21
Parliament passes a law to lift banking secrecy for the duration of one year
DECEMBER 28
Lebanon reaches 171,226 cases of Covid-19 infections, with the death toll at 1394