Beirut: “Crisis on top of crisis”

07 Sep 2020

One month after the explosion ripped through Beirut, MSF teams continue to provide aid to those injured and left homeless in a country that has been battered by crisis. Jonathan Whittall, former MSF emergency coordinator in Beirut and director of MSF’s Analysis Department, answers questions on our response since the explosion on 4 August.

msf330652_medium.jpg

A MSF team member during a visit in Karantina, Beirut. MSF teams are making door-to-door visits in neighbourhoods affected by the blast to offer support and assess the medical needs of the affected populations, with a particular focus on people suffering from non-communicable diseases. © Mohamad Cheblak/MSF

The explosion occurred while Lebanon was already enduring numerous hardships. How have those living in Beirut been affected by this latest catastrophe?

Lebanon has been battered by wave after wave of crisis. The explosion in Beirut has exposed needs and vulnerabilities that until now were hidden just beneath the surface. Now, in the streets of the city, you can see the visible destruction of infrastructure alongside the recently exposed needs of a population who have already experienced multiple shocks. 

The people whose houses have been destroyed experienced an economic collapse just months before the explosion, pushing many of them into poverty. Some had fled war in recent years before seeking refuge in Lebanon; most have lived through the political uncertainty of the past year’s protests. And like the rest of the world, Lebanon has also experienced a pandemic that has put huge strain on the country.

This explosion was a crisis no one should be forced to absorb. For Lebanon, it is a crisis on top of a crisis that has left people angry and tired.

msf330445_medium.jpg

Three-year-old Samar receives wound care at the MSF medical point. Samar and her father were leaving their building on the day of the explosion; a steel gate caused her facial injuries and burns. © Mohamad Cheblak/MSF

What has the humanitarian response included in the month since the explosion?

In these early weeks, the humanitarian response to has been primarily delivered by Lebanese civil society organisations, social movements, community members and volunteers. Following the explosion, people ferried the wounded to hospital in their cars. People opened their homes to those who had been made homeless. Across the affected areas people have mobilised to provide food, clean water, essential items and emergency healthcare. Volunteers have been cleaning up the streets and patching up the wounded. 

In the hours after the explosion, Beirut’s hospitals received thousands of wounded. This came at a time when hospitals were already overstretched. As the economic situation worsened and private healthcare became unaffordable, many Lebanese turned to the public health system. In addition, many public hospitals were under strain due to COVID-19. 

But despite the serious challenges faced by Lebanon’s healthcare system, the first response and treatment of the wounded was carried out by incredibly dedicated health workers, some of whose hospitals had been destroyed or damaged by the blast. 

The affected communities in Beirut, and those responding to these multiple crises, have been commended for their resilience. However, what has happened in Lebanon is a series of manmade crises from which people should not be continually expected to bounce back. Many of those working in the response to this latest crisis have told me that they don’t want a pat on the back for being resilient; they simply don’t want to have to pick up the pieces again.

Many of those working in the response to this latest crisis have told me that they don’t want a pat on the back for being resilient; they simply don’t want to have to pick up the pieces again.

MSF has had an active presence in Lebanon since 1976 and was able to respond quickly after the crisis. What has MSF been doing to provide assistance to those in Beirut?

Our emergency response has been designed to work alongside community initiatives and to support existing responses. We quickly realised that it was not only the injured who needed help, but also those patients on medication for chronic diseases. Many had lost or run out of their medicines, and couldn’t afford refills or could no longer access health facilities that had been damaged or destroyed. The port explosion also compounded existing traumas and mental health needs.

Since the start of our activities:

  • 737 patients have been provided with wound care
  • 2360 patients with chronic diseases have visited our fixed points or have been visited by our home based care teams, and
  • 1645 patients have been provided with chronic disease medication.

We have psychologists working from each of our medical points and carrying out home visits, while a social worker links our patients with other aid initiatives to meet their other needs. 

beirutmap-en_aug_27.jpg

We continue to provide supplies of essential relief items to a migrant worker-led organisation that supports migrant workers who have been particularly impacted by the economic crisis and the blast. We also support a community kitchen called Matbakh Al-Balad, where volunteers from distribute hot meals and identify households requiring additional assistance. We have provided kitchen kits that to be donated to those they identified as being in particular need. 

We work alongside community initiatives through the provision of training on infection prevention and control for volunteers working on the frontlines of this response. As this humanitarian response focuses on the most vulnerable, we have an additional duty to reduce people’s exposure to COVID-19 when they are receiving other forms of assistance. 

What gaps are you seeing in existing humanitarian efforts that MSF can help fill?

Traditionally, humanitarian aid in Lebanon has been provided based on the nationality or legal status of the recipient. This means that some aid is given to Syrian and Palestinian refugees, while other initiatives focus on vulnerable Lebanese communities. This approach to aid delivery can be a hindrance to a real needs-based provision of assistance in a context of multiple concurrent crises. 

In the current situation it is impossible to draw a line between the cause of people’s suffering—an economic crisis, COVID-19, war in neighbouring countries, or the port explosion—nor is it possible to divide up those who need assistance based on whether they are a refugee, a migrant or Lebanese. We have seen and heard of cases where people are not given assistance because they are a migrant or a refugee and vice versa. The explosion did not distinguish between its victims and neither should the aid response. 

We shouldn’t allow this separation between recipients of aid to be reinforced by the way in which aid agencies have segregated their humanitarian responses among different communities in the past 10 years. A humanitarian response is needed that takes into consideration the overall needs caused by simultaneous crises and is sensitive to specific vulnerabilities, in order to ensure that everyone who needs assistance receives it. 

msf330651_medium.jpg

During door-to-door visits, MSF teams offer support to those affected by the blast and assess the medical needs of those unable to receive their regular care. © Mohamad Cheblak/MSF

What do you see as MSF’s role in emergencies like this one?

MSF is an emergency medical humanitarian organisation and we have a role to play in these early days after the crisis to respond to immediate medical humanitarian needs. In Beirut we see our role as working alongside community initiatives and bridging the gap between the day of the crisis and the arrival of other aid organisations.

Our motivated, dedicated and highly skilled teams have come together from different MSF projects in the country to lead this emergency response. We saw staff from across the organisation in Lebanon mobilising and volunteering to help clear the streets of rubble in the days after the explosion.

Our approach has been to adapt to fill the gaps, a flexibility that is enabled by our independent funding. We will continue to play our part as an emergency humanitarian actor alongside our longer running programmes. But as the situation in Lebanon worsens, we need to see an aid system that can mobilise in response to overall needs caused by multiple crises, rather than only segments of suffering caused by this latest wave of disaster.

 

Can you help support our crisis response work?

Médecins Sans Frontières is responding to the aftermath of the disastrous chemical explosion in Beirut, treating the wounded, providing continuity of care for chronic disease patients, and mental healthcare for people affected by the explosion.
 
Being an independent, impartial medical humanitarian organisation, Médecins Sans Frontières can respond rapidly to emergency situations and deliver urgent medical treatment to people in need – no matter who they are.
 
By making a donation, you can help ensure that we can be there to provide medical assistance during times of crisis in places like Lebanon, Yemen and Bangladesh.
 

DONATE NOW