BRKG Massive Explosion in Beirut

coalcracker

Veteran Member
Note to self:

When you see a big explosion in the distance, take cover. The blast wave will be arriving in seconds, and you don't want to be standing behind glass windows or taking video on your phone when it hits.

Situational Awareness.

Nature doesn't adapt to stupidity.
 

mzkitty

I give up.
And some world leaders, including Trump and Macron and Britain are/were holding a teleconference to aid Beirut. Aid has been arriving already via giant cargo planes. I know KSA has sent multiple planeloads so far. And others.

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Melodi

Disaster Cat
A note on people being at the windows, given what happened this is understandable and I suspect it may have been done by design to get as high an injury or kill rate as possible.

Before the blast, there was a large harbor fire that people were watching (and I confess I've done things like that too, during the Oakland Hills firestorm we spent a lot of time at the windows) and then totally out of the blue a blast on an unimaginable scale happened.

The only mistake some people made was in not realizing that the blast was so big a sound wave would hit and smash out the walls, the windows, etc.

The only person I saw that KNEW what to do in a video was that working maid and babysitter from Indonesia (a place where violence and bombs are rather common).

She sees the flash grabs the child and runs AWAY from the window, whereas a lot of people ran even closer to it.

But many people were simply watching the harbor burn, having no idea that a secondary horrific explosion was about to take place and not really processing fast enough that they need to run AWAY from the blast even indoors.
 

The Snack Artist

Membership Revoked
A bit late for an investigation isn't it? LOL! How about investigating BEFORE the place goes up? Eff it. Bulldoze the whole thing and forget about it. Who really cares and what would they do if they found out what really happened? Nothing.
 

bw

Fringe Ranger
A bit late for an investigation isn't it? LOL! How about investigating BEFORE the place goes up? Eff it. Bulldoze the whole thing and forget about it. Who really cares and what would they do if they found out what really happened? Nothing.

The underground stuff wasn't obliterated, just fractured and partly collapsed. So there's a wealth of information down there free for the taking - computers like as not, more explosives, tools, records, you name it.
 

WildDaisy

God has a plan, Trust it!
Thats *IF* it was an "accident" and it went up from natural causes (heat, etc) and not triggered on purpose. If it was on purpose, you know they cleared out anything from below before they did it so there wouldnt be any information left.
 

Millwright

Knuckle Dragger
_______________
Video at link. It sure does look familiar.


Fire breaks out as protesters attempt to storm Beirut parliament in second night of demonstrations

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A fire has broken out near the parliament in Beirut as protesters and police clash for the second night in a row. Police deployed tear gas as demonstrators demanding the resignation of the government hurled rocks at officers.
After attempting to storm parliament on Saturday night, protesters returned to the streets on Sunday, this time hurling projectiles at security officers deployed to protect the government building.
Video footage captured the protesters pulling down barricades near parliament, and using slingshots to launch projectiles.

 

Melodi

Disaster Cat
Over in 6 days
Not over here, but then both France and England have colonial-era interest in the area (especially France) and people are desperate enough (six days without food, water, shelter,etc) to start getting on boats and hit the water - or making them.

Just because the US/Mainstream media drop a story doesn't mean it goes away for the folks who are living it or may be affected by it.
 

Plain Jane

Just Plain Jane

Lebanon tribunal says no evidence Hezbollah leadership involved in Hariri murder
Issued on: 18/08/2020 - 12:35Modified: 18/08/2020 - 12:37
Four Hezbollah members are on trial in absentia in the Netherlands over the huge Beirut suicide bombing in 2005 that killed former Prime Minister Rafic Hariri, pictured here on a billboard in the Lebanese capital

Four Hezbollah members are on trial in absentia in the Netherlands over the huge Beirut suicide bombing in 2005 that killed former Prime Minister Rafic Hariri, pictured here on a billboard in the Lebanese capital © Joseph Eid, AFP
Text by:FRANCE 24Follow
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Video by:Clovis CASALIFollow
7 min
There is no evidence that Hezbollah's leadership or the Syrian government were involved in the 2005 bombing that killed former Lebanese prime minister Rafik Hariri, the Special Tribunal for Lebanon said on Tuesday.


The UN-backed tribunal is reading the verdict in the trial of four Hezbollah members charged with conspiracy to kill Hariri and 21 others.

"The trial chamber is of the view that Syria and Hezbollah may have had motives to eliminate Mr. Hariri and his political allies, however there is no evidence that the Hezbollah leadership had any involvement in Mr. Hariri's murder and there is no direct evidence of Syrian involvement," said Judge David Re, reading a summary of the court's 2,600-page decision.

However, the court said there was enough evidence to link two Hezbollah members to mobile phones allegedly involved in Hariri's killing.

The verdicts were delayed by nearly two weeks as a mark of respect for victims of another devastating explosion — the massive Beirut port blast that killed around 180 people and injured thousands more on August 4, plunging a nation already reeling from economic and social malaise even deeper into crisis.

The court ruling threatens to compound tensions in the tiny country. Hariri was Lebanon’s most prominent Sunni politician at the time of his Feb. 14, 2005 assassination, while the Iran-backed Hezbollah is a Shiite Muslim group.

Mobile phones
The trial centred on the alleged roles of four Hezbollah members in the suicide truck bombing that killed Hariri and 21 others and wounded 226 people. Prosecutors based their case largely on data from mobile phones allegedly used by the plotters to plan and execute the bombing.

On Tuesday, the judges said they were "satisfied beyond reasonable doubt" that main suspect Salim Ayyash was most likely the user of mobile phones used to scope out Hariri ahead of the attack, the key plank of the prosecution case.

They were also satisfied that the 56-year-old Ayyash "had associations with Hezbollah".
Judges also said they were satisfied beyond reasonable doubt that Hussein Oneissi, 46, was the main user of another of the phones.

However they said they were not satisfied with the evidence linking the phones with the two other suspects — Hassan Habib Merhi, 54, and Assad Sabra, 43.

The judges said evidence also linked phones to the alleged mastermind of the bombing, Hezbollah commander Mustafa Badreddine -- who was indicted by the court but is believed to have been killed in the Damascus area in May 2016.

'Man-made hell'
During the trial, which spanned 415 days of hearings, the tribunal in Leidschendam, near The Hague, heard evidence from 297 witnesses.

When the trial opened in January 2014, a scale model of the blast scene stood on a table in the centre of the courtroom and a prosecutor told judges that explosives packed into a Mitsubishi truck detonated to create “a man-made hell”.


The assassination was seen by many in Lebanon as the work of Syria, a charge Damascus denies.
Some Lebanese see the tribunal as an impartial way of uncovering the truth about Hariri’s slaying, while Hezbollah — which denies involvement — calls it an Israeli plot to tarnish the group.
Hariri’s son Saad, himself a former prime minister, was attending the day-long delivery of the judgment.
(FRANCE 24 with REUTERS)
 

packyderms_wife

Neither here nor there.
Not over here, but then both France and England have colonial-era interest in the area (especially France) and people are desperate enough (six days without food, water, shelter,etc) to start getting on boats and hit the water - or making them.

Just because the US/Mainstream media drop a story doesn't mean it goes away for the folks who are living it or may be affected by it.

I was wondering if there were any updates... the riots and so called friendly protests are the main news here, that and bashing Trump.
 

Knoxville's Joker

Has No Life - Lives on TB
Given everything going on, this might be a good read on how things could unfold elsewhere now.

But the lebanese government is blocking any attempts to investigate into things.


Lebanon: 3 Years On, No Justice for Beirut Blast​

UN Rights Body Should Set Up International Fact-Finding Mission

https://www.hrw.org/modal/89426
Smoke rises from the port after the explosion on August 4, 2020 in Beirut, Lebanon. © 2020 Fadel Itani/NurPhoto via Getty Images
(Beirut) – Member states of the United Nations Human Rights Council should support the establishment of an international, independent, and impartial fact-finding mission into the 2020 Beirut Port explosion, more than 300 organizations and individuals, including Human Rights Watch, survivors, and families of victims said today. They sent a joint letter with the request to permanent representatives of member and observer states of the council, noting that there has been more than three years of continuous political interference into the domestic investigation.

“We still don’t have access to the truth or to justice, three years after the devastating explosion took our daughter, our home, and our neighborhoods, in a country plagued by impunity,” said Paul and Tracy Naggear, whose 3-year-old daughter Alexandra was killed in the explosion. “We call upon each and every member state of the Human Rights Council to hear our cry for justice and support the establishment of an international fact-finding mission.”

Since December 23, 2021, the domestic investigation into the explosion has been suspended after a series of legal challenges were filed by politicians charged with crimes related to the blast against the lead investigator in the case, Judge Tarek Bitar. The politicians have filed over 25 requests to dismiss Bitar, and other judges involved in the case, causing repeated suspensions of the inquiry while the cases are adjudicated.

In January 2023, Bitar’s attempt to resume the investigation was thwarted by Lebanon’s Public Prosecutor, Ghassan Oueidat, who was himself charged by Bitar in the Beirut Blast case and summoned for investigation. Oueidat filed a lawsuit against Bitar, suspending the investigation, and ordered the release of all 17 suspects who had been detained in connection to the case. At least one suspect has since fled the country.

In March, 38 countries at the UN Human Rights Council condemned the pervasive obstruction and interference with Lebanon’s domestic investigation in a joint statement delivered by Australia before the Council. More than five months later, the Lebanese authorities have taken no meaningful steps to ensure that the domestic investigation can progress or to adopt a law on the independence of the judiciary in line with international standards, the organizations said.
The authorities also failed to respond to a communication sent in March by the UN special rapporteur on the independence of judges and lawyers, Margaret Satterthwaite. She condemned the interference into the investigation and expressed concern that “former state officials and others who have been implicated in the case have disingenuously resorted to recusal proceedings and other challenging actions directed at the investigating judge appointed to examine the case.”

UN member states should put forward a resolution establishing a fact-finding mission to uphold the rights of victims and survivors to truth, justice, and effective remedies, including reparations and to show that such deliberate inaction by the Lebanese authorities has consequences, the organizations said.

The August 4, 2020, Beirut port explosion was one of the largest non-nuclear explosions in recent history, killing at least 220 people, wounding over 7,000, and causing extensive property damage. An in-depth investigation by Human Rights Watch found that the disaster arose from the government’s failure to protect the fundamental right to life and pointed to the potential involvement of senior political and security officials in Lebanon. Countries with Global Magnitsky and other human rights and corruption sanctions regimes should sanction Lebanese officials implicated in ongoing violations of human rights related to the explosion and efforts to undermine accountability, Human Rights Watch said.

“For three years, Lebanese authorities have repeatedly and deliberately obstructed the investigation into the blast, showing absolute disregard for the rights of victims and their families to truth and justice,” said Ramzi Kaiss, Lebanon researcher at Human Rights Watch. “International action is needed to break the culture of impunity in Lebanon.”
 
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