Agricultural Crisis to Loom if Lebanese-Syrian Border Closed

إقرأ هذا الخبر بالعربية W460

The uprising in the neighboring Syria, which kicked off in March 2011, began to significantly have an impact on the Lebanese agricultural sector.

Head of the Farmer’s Association Antoine Hoayek urged on Monday the cabinet to lease two ferries to move trucks transporting goods by the sea to Jordan and Egypt, holding the concerned officials responsible for the damage that will inflict the agricultural sector if exports were halted.

He criticized the officials’ “negligence” towards the disaster that will hit the agricultural sector, which is a central aspect to the Lebanese economy, if the Lebanese-Syrian border was completely closed.

Hoayek noted that the only solution is to transport the trucks through ferries from Beirut to Egypt or the Jordanian port of Aqaba, at least twice a week, to sell Lebanese vegetables and fruits to Gulf countries and Iraq.

He called on the cabinet to swiftly act to prevent an agricultural crisis and to hold agreements with the Egyptian government to open the Suez Canal for the Lebanese ferries and with the Jordanian authorities to exempt these trucks from fees in order to ease their access to the markets.

On Sunday, hundreds of Lebanese trucks were halted at Jdeidet Yabous near the Masnaa crossing after tension escalated across the Syrian-Jordanian border.

The trucks were loaded with some 7,000 tons of vegetables and fruits.

Comments 8
Thumb normzz 23 July 2012, 11:34

I wonder if it is suitable to picture marijuana fields for this story?lol

Thumb normzz 23 July 2012, 11:34

I wonder if it is suitable to picture marijuana fields for this story?lol

Default-user-icon Noreply (Guest) 23 July 2012, 12:03

Ahah! Fantastic... Somebody was in charge of finding a picture in the database and was confused between wheat and weeds!!! Ahah! Even better when you have another article about the destruction of canabis fields on the same page!!

Default-user-icon Noreply (Guest) 23 July 2012, 12:23

Much better with grapes, indeed!

Missing lozinaus 23 July 2012, 14:41

They are all so corrupt and should be ashamed of what they've turned the country into! I just don't get it, so much land, so much agriculture but no commercial law to protect its own people, do these politicians really work for Lebanon?

Default-user-icon bennie (Guest) 23 July 2012, 14:52

There are not only major roads linking Lebanon to the rest of the Arab world but also a rail link .... it all runs through Israel .... too bad you're still at war with the only peaceful country in the region.

Thumb jabal10452 23 July 2012, 15:22

Bashir once told us during a speech at the Maifouk LF base that "agriculture is what binds the people to their land and must therefore be protected and nurtured".

Thumb benzona 23 July 2012, 15:39

Since the antiquity, the Bekaa valley was know to export its food to Rome. If the authorities in charge had more culture than the culture of weapons, the producers wouldn't be suffering. Should this situation remain, they'd probably start building on their lands because it would be more profitable.