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Showing posts with label 14 March. Show all posts
Showing posts with label 14 March. Show all posts

Verdict TSL: Au-delà de la déception, une première judiciaire

Publié dans l'OLJ du 22 août 2020

Par Karim el-Mufti, 


 La gestion de la tragédie du 4 août a confirmé à quel point le besoin de justice demeure criant au Liban. Dès les premiers jours, la cacophonie judiciaire s’est ainsi ajoutée à l’incurie et à la confusion des autorités, qui ont laissé la société civile en première ligne dans l’aide aux victimes et au déblaiement des dégâts. Tout cela traduit un vague sentiment de déjà-vu, dénotant le même état de désordre institutionnel que lors de l’attentat dans lequel a trouvé la mort l’ancien Premier ministre Rafic Hariri ainsi que 21 autres personnes, le 14 février 2005. 

C’est ce crime terroriste que le Tribunal spécial pour le Liban (TSL) se chargeait de juger depuis le début, en 2014, du procès de cinq (puis quatre) accusés, tous affiliés au Hezbollah. C’est dire si ce verdict, rendu quinze ans après ce crime et deux semaines après le drame du 4 août, était attendu. Et les déceptions qu’a pu susciter sa teneur (une condamnation et trois acquittements) chez de nombreuses parties sont sans doute à la hauteur de cette attente. Avant même ce jugement, nombreux sont ceux qui voyaient déjà dans cette instance la manifestation d’une « justice sélective ». 

À la sortie de la guerre civile, une amnistie a effectivement blanchi les responsables des pires atrocités, tandis qu’étaient exclues de la clémence les attaques contre les figures politiques et religieuses. En 2005, une logique similaire semble l’emporter : les victimes lambda des multiples déchaînements de violence post-guerre ne pouvant espérer la même considération juridictionnelle que l’ancien Premier ministre assassiné. Modus operandi Et pourtant, il s’agit d’examiner les apports considérables rendus par les travaux du TSL. Notamment au regard de l’appréciation des éléments de preuve présentés. Comme le spécifie la version résumée du jugement : « La chambre de première instance ne détermine pas (…) si les accusés sont “coupables” ou “innocents”, mais (…), conformément aux principes du droit international des droits de l’homme, elle n’est tenue que de déterminer leur culpabilité au-delà de tout doute raisonnable » (§41). 

L’acquittement de trois des quatre accusés faute de preuves concluantes dénote l’attachement des magistrats à ces règles. En prononçant la culpabilité de Salim Ayache, les juges ont ainsi identifié nommément l’une des personnes impliquées dans le complot terroriste. Il fut également établi qu’il était un partisan du Hezbollah (§57) et que « la Syrie et le Hezbollah auraient pu avoir des raisons d’éliminer M. Hariri et certains de ses alliés politiques » (§57). Les juges ont estimé ne pas pouvoir « ignorer le contexte (politique et historique) de l’attaque comme étant un mobile possible » (§55), tout en reconnaissant que « les éléments de preuve ne permettent pas d’établir de manière affirmative qui les a menés à assassiner M. Hariri » (§502). 

Ainsi, si la cour n’a pas engagé la responsabilité du leadership du parti de Dieu dans l’affaire, c’est avant tout par manque de preuves, auquel l’altération de la scène du crime dès le soir même de l’attentat par les autorités libanaises (§85) n’est pas étrangère. En revanche, le jugement relève le très haut degré d’organisation et de discipline des personnes impliquées dans l’attentat, lequel « souligne l’implication (...) de personnes ayant un point commun tel que l’appartenance à une organisation (…) soudée dans laquelle des agents de confiance se voient déléguer des tâches particulièrement sensibles » (§497). Les enquêteurs, libanais comme internationaux, ont dû faire face à des obstacles monumentaux, dont le sacrifice du capitaine Wissam Eid assassiné en janvier 2008 – une affaire jamais élucidée par la justice libanaise – pour avoir brillamment mis au jour des indices cruciaux avec son étude des réseaux de télécommunications. 

Ces efforts ont permis de percer le modus operandi de l’attaque terroriste, ce qui constitue en soi une issue spectaculaire, et désormais connue au regard de tous. Selon le jugement, « dix individus ou plus étaient impliqués dans le complot criminel » (§475), sachant qu’au moins 63 personnes étaient impliquées d’une manière ou d’une autre. Ils établissaient le contact au moyen de mobiles aux lignes prépayées, liées à de fausses identités, et organisés en réseaux de communication voulus secrets. Ainsi, le principe de colocalisation des différents appareils mobiles a permis d’épingler Salim Ayache dans son « rôle central et leader dans l’exécution de l’attaque » (§553). Ce fil d’Ariane sans lequel « il n’y aurait aucune preuve le liant à l’explosion » (§543) constitue un précédent en matière de reconnaissance de cyberpreuves pour confondre les intentions criminelles d’un accusé. 

Or le simple fait de lever de nombreuses zones d’ombre sur une attaque terroriste d’une telle sophistication tout en aboutissant à une condamnation constitue, en matière d’assassinat politique, une première dans l’histoire du Liban. En sus, cette condamnation apporte un début de reconnaissance aux souffrances des victimes dont la chambre a rappelé la nécessité d’attribution de compensations. 

 Leçons

D’une certaine manière, ce jugement apporte donc aussi une pierre utile au puissant mouvement de redevabilité qui anime toutes les victimes au Liban, particulièrement depuis la catastrophe du port de Beyrouth. Il y va de l’intérêt national de sortir de la hiérarchisation des victimes pour construire les outils mettant fin à l’impunité. Ce premier verdict apporte également des leçons de poids sur le plan du contre-terrorisme, dans une région sclérosée par ce fléau. 

Le modus operandi révélé a mis en lumière des failles monumentales dans le dispositif sécuritaire libanais. Qu’il s’agisse des faits établis (la surveillance, les canaux de communication, les moyens financiers faramineux, etc.) ou non (par exemple l’acquisition des explosifs ou l’identité du kamikaze) par la chambre de première instance, les Libanais sont en droit de savoir si ces défaillances structurelles ont été résolues, les auteurs n’ayant jamais été inquiétés, ni même soupçonnés. 

Par ailleurs, le mandat du TSL inclut aussi trois autres cas appelés à être jugés, à savoir l’assassinat de Georges Haoui, le 21 juin 2005, et les tentatives d’assassinat contre Marwan Hamadé le 1er octobre 2004 et Élias Murr le 12 juillet 2005. Il n’est pas non plus exclu que le procureur fasse appel de l’acquittement des trois autres accusés de l’affaire Hariri, à condition toutefois de pouvoir entrer en possession d’éléments nouveaux et d’avoir l’opportunité de pouvoir remonter la piste des commanditaires, grands absents du premier procès. En attendant, il est de la responsabilité des autorités libanaises de tout mettre en œuvre pour arrêter Ayache. 

Sans véritable effort, les officiels libanais risquent de s’attirer des sanctions internationales, notamment américaines. Dans ce contexte politique et judiciaire, le Hezbollah se confronte à un casse-tête pour tenter de limiter l’impact de cette épée de Damoclès. Fils et héritier politique de l’ancien Premier ministre assassiné en 2005, Saad Hariri pourrait, lui, y voir une brèche lui permettant de remonter en selle après une série de déconvenues qui ont manqué de le propulser hors du jeu politique libanais.

Tumultuous Lebanon, Where the Intelligence War Never Pauses


Dr. Karim El Mufti
University Professor
Political Scientist


It took longer than usual compared with other political assassinations (given the high secrecy linked to security related areas), but the information eventually came out, the head of the Intelligence Branch of the Internal Security Forces (ISF), Brigadier Wissam El Hassan, was targeted and terminated.


1. The political war and Syria

Minutes into the Ashrafieh blast and 14 March local figures were already trying to make political good fortune out of the tragedy, raising the scenario of an alleged targeting of the Kataeb House, or the 14 March General Secretariat office, or even how Syria the terrorist “targeted the heart of a Lebanese Christian area”. The context changed once the announcement broke of the direct plot against the ISF Brigadier, even though the accused party remained the same: Syria had killed Al Hassan in “retaliation of the arrest of Michel Samaha”, the close advisor of Bashar Al Assad ; he was targeted because of the “efforts made by the ISF to stop Syrian infiltrations into Lebanon”.

Blaming directly the Syrian regime for the terrorist blast, self-exiled Saad Hariri was, from day one, trying to use the killing as a high horse to make a comeback onto the Lebanese political landscape after a period of political numbness: “if I were prime minister, my actions would be to stand against Bachar el Assad and say very clearly that anything that will come into Lebanon, if the regime is trying to export its terrorists to Lebanon, we would definitely refuse it[1].

Other spokespersons from the 14 March coalition carried on with the interpretation that this attack was an export of the Syrian conflict into the heart of the Lebanese capital. As clearly put by Kataeb president and anti-Syrian figure, Amine El Gemayel, to the LBC television : “This regime, which is crumbling, is trying to export its conflict to Lebanon”.

But this explanation falls short when, at the same time, the same anti-Syrian coalition eagerly connected the attack (due to “troubling similarities”) with past attacks on anti-Syrian figures (Gebran Tueni or Antoine Ghanem for instance), at a time when “Syria al Assad” was well up on its feet, way before the civil war there.  

Still, there is no doubt in the extensiveness of the blow the anti-Syrian coalition 14 March has just received with the decapitation of the head of a security service loyal to its agenda. Along with other public administrations, like the Council for Reconstruction and Development and Ogero within the Telecommunications Ministry, this ISF branch represented little of what was left of the opposition’s influence within State institutions, remotely led by Saad Hariri since he was removed from power in January of last year. Given the sensitive and strategic nature of the Information Branch within the ISF, needless to say how enduring the hit came to the political leverage of the 14 March coalition.

2. The evidence war and the STL

Wissam Al Hassan was not only a top security operative who made possible the dismantlement of pro-Israeli cells, or the arrest of former Minister Michel Samaha last August for planning to carry out terrorist attacks on Lebanese soil, he was most importantly in charge of the Lebanese side of the investigation of Rafic Hariri’s assassination. Brigadier Al Hassan was hence among the people the prosecutor at the Special Tribunal for Lebanon (STL) could count on in order to build his case. In that, the indictment against the four members of Hezbollah is based, in the prosecutor’s own words, on “circumstantial evidence[2] related to a series of interconnected telecommunications cells that were operating in preparation to the attack, and that were allegedly set up by the four suspects yet to be arrested.  

With the overturn of the political equilibrium and the formation of the 8 March pro-Syrian government, which is hostile to the STL work, the intelligence unit run by Brigadier Al Hassan had the mission of keeping the cooperation with the STL’s prosecutor alive. It is important to highlight that the ISF Information Branch is the unit that uncovered the telecommunications cells’ matrix (with the support of another police martyr and IT expert, Captain Wissam Eid, assassinated in January 2008), before linking it to Hezbollah members, and then possibly leaking the information to Der Spiegel who suggested this eventuality in May 2009, two years before the indictment was issued. Since that time, a crucial target shift has taken place, passing from the suspicion of an official Syrian involvement to a Lebanese (Hezbollah) involvement in the assassination of Rafic Hariri.

As such, anti-Hezbollah formations in Lebanon had high hopes in the work of the ISF intelligence branch as it was fuelling, genuinely or not, the accusation party, despite the loss of control over the government. Whether these pieces of evidence were authentic or not was never really the primary concern of the 14 March coalition. Some opposition figures, like Samir Geagea, chose to entirely endorse the views of the prosecutor as to the involvement of Hezbollah suspects[3], even before the pre-trial Judge had set a trial date, whereas Hezbollah officials regularly rejected the telecommunications related evidence considering it fabricated. 

This evidence war, that will contribute to determine the fate and outcome of the coming trial, has put Brigadier Wissam El Hassan at the centre of a vast intelligence (national, regional and international) confrontation, as he fell victim of irreconcilable conflicting interests where the battles behind the scenes never pause. 

3. The 14 March window of opportunity to regain political ground

For the opposition group, the killing of Al Hassan has hence taken away a strong Lebanese ally in the investigation team that would have been keen on beefing up the accusation party against the four Hezbollah suspects, especially with the trial date (in abstentia) approaching and fixed to 25 March 2013. In the minds of 14 March figures, as the trial would advance against Hezbollah members, the popularity of the party of God would be shaken, and this during election year.

Until then, fearing another May 2008 violent showdown, 14 March leaders have decided to throw their internal wrath against Nagib Mikati. The prime minister now faces a tough spot as the attack happened on his watch while he is representing a pro-Syrian government, despite ingenious manoeuvring to escape impossible contradictions during his mandate through decisions that digressed from core 8 March interests. We can mention for instance the funding of the Lebanese share of the STL, the spearheading of aid towards the Syrian displaced usually considered as supporting the Free Syrian Army, or the freezing of the wage increase, an important component of 8 March agenda, as a gesture to the private sector. At the end of the line, Prime Minister Mikati offered his resignation that has been, curious constitutional outcome, “suspended”, as he is today threatened by experiencing the same political fate as Omar Karame whose political carrier crashed back in April 2005 in close circumstances.
 
Accumulating political and street pressure against the present prime minister is a convenient way for 14 March to be blaming a Sunni official for the death of another Sunni official, hence hitting on Hezbollah’s hold over the government in an indirect fashion without being accused of fuelling sectarianism, and eventually try and bring it down. This short-term battle represents, for opposition figures, a small window of opportunity to regain some political capital a few months before the 2013 elections, but at the cost of maintaining Lebanon in a state of tumult.


Beirut, 21 October 2012



[1] Saad Hariri interview to CNN, reported by The Daily Star, 20 October 2012, available at http://www.dailystar.com.lb/News/Politics/2012/Oct-20/192109-hariri-tells-cnn-hasan-killed-over-samaha-case.ashx#ixzz29owAYqFW 
[2] §3, p.3 of the indictment
[3] Press conference of Samir Geagea in Meerab on 27 August 2011, cf. Geagea : L’acte d’accusation est basé sur suffisamment de preuves, L’Orient-Le Jour, 28 August 2011.

Lebanon Downhill, a Mafiocracy in Action


Dr. Karim El Mufti
University teacher 
Social entrepreneur

We need not talk about corruption in Lebanon anymore[1], its Greater Corruption that has taken over the land of the Cedars. More than 20 years after the end of the civil war and dozens of billions of dollars swollen up by the “costs” of reconstruction and rehabilitation, Lebanon’s situation remains as if the conflict just ended. As such, the current economic and social status appears to have worsened lately, as the infrastructure experienced serious degradation, coming close to collapsing: sharp power blackouts[2], mobile network failures, internet connection close to being the slowest in the world[3], absence of sustainable commuting system[4], ravaging pollution[5], rotten food[6], fake medicine[7], expanding chaotic urbanization and building structural failures[8], destruction of ancient heritage[9], not to mention that Beirut recently won the palm of the most expensive city in the region[10].

The list goes on and on, putting the future of the country’s economic and social welfare at great risk, not to mention the regression of human rights in what used to be the most progressive Arab country as far as freedom of expression is concerned[11]. The heavy militarization of policy making, which paramount represents the preoccupying new political custom of electing a military commander as head of State, along with the growing discretionary role of the General Security and other security agencies, also send worrying signals as to where Lebanon is headed. Not willing to tackle urgent socio-economic issues, the entirety of the political class strategically relies on the security grip (each allied with a particular security sector) to continue to impose the stability of a deeply corrupted system.

This Greater Corruption has not only put a halt to the modernization of the country, but has also established a very narrow profiting system in which members of the political elite substantially feed from the different lucrative sectors in our national economy, whether in public or private sector, thus handing over the country’s (un)management to the hands of a mafiocracy. Monopolies have restricted a big portion of the country’s wealth in the hands of a few ; unregulated banks are no match to the rising challenge of financing growth and modern sectors of economic activity ; the oil and gas reserves still await maritime exploitation ; consumers rights are left by the door not allowed any place in the system. Public land is either leased to the private sector for symbolic dollars[12], or partially privatized[13] or closed down for any public community to share[14]. Small and medium enterprises (SMEs) struggle to keep up with the heightening costs of doing business due to the lack of investments in proper infrastructure, causing heavy inflation of the costs of living for the Lebanese population.

In order for this mafiocracy to maintain its tight grip over Lebanon, three factors are in place. First, the absence of the notion of conflict of interest that lost all legal and cultural significance in both the public/private landscapes at all levels of the society[15]. Second, the protection umbrella granted by political and security actors tying up the hands of the judiciary and any law enforcement attempt. Thirdly, the continuous choice of policymakers to escape any reshuffling of the fiscal and financial burden in a fair and responsible manner and continue to rely on two major funding channels; for the State, dependency on foreign aid worth billions of dollars; for the Lebanese households, dependency on the expatriates’ yearly eight billion dollars sent to their families.

The effects of Greater Corruption led the social elevator to dramatically slow down, as educated youth flee a shallow job market and real estate costs suffocate young families now indebted for 20 or 30 years. As a result, grave consequences are starting to surface; the recent hike in the number of bank robberies, cases of breaking and entering, carjacking, looting and kidnapping (despite the “security enforcement month” recently launched by Interior Minister Marwan Charbel[16]), represent only the tip of the iceberg. Add to that the hard strike launched by EDL workers calling for an improvement of their working conditions, practically ignored by relevant authorities, while other do-have in the country do not share the fiscal burden within the national economy.

This alarming situation doesn’t seem to worry the ruling political class who doesn’t appear keen to change the unwritten rules of the present political economical system, despite the fact that we are approaching key parliamentarian elections next summer. As a matter of fact, the partial election in Koura held on 15 July 2012[17] shows how socio-economic factors are completely absent from the political formations’ agendas. According to Ahmad Hariri, Secretary General of the Future Movement, this partial election is a “prelude of the 2013 elections which will determine the face of Lebanon in the future[18]; no word (from either political sides) of the difficult living conditions in the local areas of the district.

The current mafiocracy is a collection of war makers, whether past or present. They have brought conflict, destruction, displacement and today, greater corruption to a point of social and economic depletion. As such, they represent the greatest menace for the future of the country. They are, forever, indebted towards the children of the civil war and the generations beyond.

15 July 2012


[1] Transparency International ranks Lebanon as 134th out of 183 countries on their perceptions of corruption index, with a score of 2.5 out of 10, a level considered very corrupt. The country is perceived as the 13th most corrupt in the region, in The Daily Star, 14 June 2012, available at http://www.dailystar.com.lb/News/Local-News/2012/Jun-14/176776-corruption-remains-rampant-in-lebanon-transparency-organization-warns.ashx#ixzz20lHszvbL
[3]Lebanon has slowest Internet connection in the world”, Le Commerce du Levant, March 2011,
[4] Read “La Loi des Bulldozers”, L’Orient Le-Jour ,14 July 2012.
[5] Read “Air Pollution linked to Cancer in Lebanon”, The Daily Star, 28 July 2010.
[6] In March 2012, a food safety crisis was revealed as several tons of meat, chicken and fish were dumped throughout Lebanon by irresponsible restaurant owners, read http://www.dailystar.com.lb/News/Local-News/2012/Mar-08/165939-authorities-confiscate-rotten-meat-and-chicken.ashx#axzz20gJlIyn8
[7] Lebanon frequently has to deal with counterfeit drugs on the local market leading to many fatal consequences, read “Fake drugs are real threats”, Now Lebanon, 29 March 2010.
[8] On 15 January 2012, a building collapsed in Fassouh neighborhood of Beirut killing 27 people. Read http://www.dailystar.com.lb/News/Local-News/2012/Jan-16/159999-11-bodies-pulled-from-collapsed-beirut-building.ashx#axzz20gJlIyn8
[9] The latest episode of the destruction of Lebanese Heritage was the devastation by real estate promoters of ancient ruins on the Mina El Hosn protected site in Beirut on 26 June 2012, read http://www.nowlebanon.com/NewsArticleDetails.aspx?ID=415856 
[11] See the innovative civil society series Mamnou3/Forbidden, A Lebanese web-series about the day-to-day inner workings of the country's censorship bureau, www.mamnou3.com
[12] For instance, the Golf Club in Ouzai (South of Beirut), a select club established on a public lot, is rented by the State to a private holding for 1.100 Lebanese Pounds a year (0.73$), cf An Nahar, 6 April 2011. On another note, public coast land is rented to private beach resorts by State for 4.5$ per sqm, as disclosed by Al Akhbar on 2 July 2012, cf http://www.al-akhbar.com/node/96703
[13] Like the case of SOLIDERE, cf BEYHUM, Nabil. The Crisis of Urban Culture: The Three Reconstruction Plans for Beirut. The Beirut Review, n°4, Fall 1992
[14] Like the case of Horsh Beirut, the Pine Forest at the heart of Beirut closed to the public, cf “Beirut’s lone public park isn’t”, Los Angeles Times, 7 January 2011.
[15] On Lebanon’s contemporary pathology, read Samir Khalaf, Lebanon Adrift, Saqi Books, 2012
[17] Due to the passing away of district’s MP Farid Habib.

The Management of Public Interest in Lebanon, a Broken Concept

Dr. Karim El Mufti

Researcher in Political Science and Public Policy

Beirut, 21 September 2011

After the end of the civil war, the 1990’s were dedicated to rebuild and reconstruct torn and shattered Lebanon. The Lebanese State and its Public Service could resume its original purpose: managing all affairs related to public interest and drawing the needed public policies to meet the after-war challenges and modernize the country.

This paper offers an analysis of public action as undertaken by the Lebanese authorities since the end of the war and its evolution over 20 years of public management[1] and how it was maintained in a state of unfinished edification.

*

Despite the 15 years of conflict, it is important to note that the Lebanese bureaucracy was able to survive the implosion of the political institutions of the State[2], not without damaging consequences: “Although the bureaucracy has survived despite considerable damage and lasting scars, it has succumbed further to economic corruption, favouritism and political intervention in the face of the pressures generated by the intensity of the conflict[3].

With the reproduction of the particular Lebanese state model in the aftermath of the war, shaped by the Taëf Accord and ruled by the sacred power sharing system and sectarian representation at all levels, political and administrative, the “public civilization[4] could not overcome its multiple flaws. The latter were perpetuated through political intervention, clientelism and neo-patrimonial practices, rendering difficult any form of consolidation in order for it to meet the technocratic needs of the political class in charge at that time of the reconstruction. As enounced by Thierry Pfister, “Public Service is the legitimate regulator of the stretched clock of the nation, thanks to its cumulated memory, its long-term perspective and its competence in the preparation and execution of decisions[5]. Because of the war, the Lebanese bureaucracy had already been diminished in its resources and capacities; a survey conducted by Maroun Kisirwani during the civil war stressed on how the conflict “reduced civil service professionalism”, kept the civil servants unsupervised, led to the “decrease of coordination among administrative units” and an overall the “dislocation of offices and work force[6].

Led by successful businessman Rafic Hariri, despite a very fragmented and uneasy political spectrum, the reconstruction of the Lebanese economy was set as highest of priorities, along with attending to the destroyed urban tissue, the rehabilitation of the infrastructure, the electricity and telephone networks and water access. Hariri’s administration managed to hastily lower the inflation, stabilize the Lebanese currency and steady consumer prices[7]. However, the consolidation of the public administration did not make it to the top list of items to invest in during the immediate after-war. In the eyes of the political class, “the bureaucracy ha[d] lost much of its ability to function on a national basis[8] and the way the new authorities chose to deal with the weakened public administration was to enforce disciplinary measures in order to, quoting Prime Minister Rafic Hariri, “eliminate its elements of corruption”. This led in 1993 to a vast anti-corruption campaign (the only one in the past 20 years) during which 5.000 cases of suspected corrupted civil servants were initially identified and a course of eviction from office was officially initiated. After the number decreased to about 500 cases, these measures were ultimately abrogated by the State Council claiming “power abuse[9], uncovering the clumsiness and unpreparedness of the authorities in dealing with the legal issues of this process. Moreover, seeking refuge against eventual future attempts of expurgation, the rest of the civil servants community developed closer ties with influential political factions, thus perpetuating the politicization of the public administration, with the salient consequences we continue to observe today.

It’s at a later stage that the authorities came to understand the importance of bureaucracy to efficiently carry out reforms and execute nationwide public policies: it wasn’t until 1996 that the government created a Ministry of State dedicated to manage the modernization process of public administration, the OMSAR (Office of the Minister of State for Administration Reform). Yet, the measure came as a bureaucratic response (the creation of an additional public department) instead of placing this type of public action at the heart of each one of the political institutions which would have symbolized a stronger political will for upgrading the public administration to an efficient working level.

Instead, looking at the way reconstruction was carried out, the reform wagons starting the year of 1991 did not include the public administration, neither as an instrument nor as an object of reconstruction.

1/ The Marginalization of the Lebanese Public Administration in the Reconstruction Process

One of the factors explaining the chronic marginalization of public administration in the reconstruction process relates to Rafic Hariri (and his associates)’s liberal vision of Minimum State theories. The dominating pattern was to marginalize the official public service and do without its burdening public administration which was considered too complex to reform and develop. Because of its politically sectarian structure[10], its high level of corruption[11] and its lack of resources, the reconstruction process bypassed the essential part of the public service. As a result, underpaid civil servants developed tangled corruption networks and systems, as they grew stronger political clientelistic networks, leading to an inextricable situation where administrative reform has become harder than ever, as illustrated by the decline of OMSAR’s range of action in the recent years.

Furthermore, a very large majority of the political class connected to the World Bank, the IMF and the UNDP’s objectives favoring the reduction of the size and costs of public administration. Hence, to “reduce the size and cost of the public administration” became a shared goal between the government and the UNDP in Lebanon[12], without giving sufficient attention to rehabilitate and strengthen the supervising bodies of the public service.

The political decision to bypass the public administration back in the 1990’s was implemented using mainly three tools.

Firstly, handpicked existing bureaucracies were upgraded, i.e. strengthened with special prerogatives, like for instance the Council for Development and Reconstruction (CDR). Created in 1977 to deal with the devastation caused by the first two years of the civil conflict, its mandate was amended[13] making the CDR the lead public institution over the planning of the reconstruction process. Consequently, it was the CDR that represented the Government in June 1991 during the launching of what was called the 'Recovery Planning for the Reconstruction and Development of Lebanon'. At that time, an agreement was passed between the CDR and private bodies, among which the Hariri Foundation, International Bechtel Incorporated and Dar Al-Handasah Consultants. The last two institutions drafted a plan labeled “Horizon 2000 for Reconstruction and Development”, its overall goals being to maximize economic growth and increase social cohesion. It was hence Bechtel, one of the leading engineering international companies that designed a recovery strategy plan putting forward the main policy areas such as the development of tourism, agriculture, productive industries and higher education. As noted by Maroun Kisirwani, “a pivotal role in preparing the plan Horizon 2000 for the Reconstruction and Development of Lebanon was entrusted to the CDR [which] finalised and subnutted [it] to the Council of Ministers in February 1993 with a total cost of US$10,995 million[14].

Hence, the CDR was upgraded and strengthened in order to support the vision Rafic Hariri had for after-war Beirut and do away with any possible obstacle coming from the public administration: “To turn the scale model of ‘his’ Beirut into reality, Hariri faced huge obstacles. But he was determined to overcome these burdens and find or – if necessary – create the tools he needs to succeed. For example, in 1992, after Hariri had become Prime Minister, the CDR saw its legal powers considerably enhanced and it was placed under the authority of the Council of Ministers while a business partner of Hariri was named at the head of CDR. As such, the CDR became a powerful agency in an emerging shadow administration gradually set up by Hariri in order to circumvent red tape and through which the premier could have a substantial impact on reconstruction policy[15].

A second measure was implemented in order to sidestep what was considered an inefficient and unreliable public administration, which is the establishment of an administration within the administration, with the creation of new categories of better paid contractual experts and consultants (Lebanese and foreigners) that were integrated to the organization charts of the public administration, along the initial civil servants: in order to be able to go around both the archaic legal framework governing the recruitment process[16] and the ridiculously low pay scales of the public sector[17], the authorities allowed the recruitment of officers and experts from outside the public service cadre, while leaving the selection process to the original donor (UNDP or the Westminster Foundation for the Parliament). This better paid and well educated workforce was integrated in key institutions of the public sector, such as the Presidency of the Council of the Ministers, the Parliament, the Ministry of Finance, the Ministry of Economy and Trade, OMSAR, etc., in order to accomplish the tasks usually rendered by the traditional bureaucracy in terms of planning, researching, supervising, executing and implementing measures and projects of public nature. As an example, let us remind that the successful VAT department created within the Finance Ministry, and its modern training institute, were based on the expertise of foreign and Lebanese consultants from outside the initial public administration[18].

A third path was set that ultimately sealed the strategy of phasing out the public administration in the post-war reconstruction efforts: outsourcing many aspects of public management directly to the private sector, moreover paving the way towards privatizing public space. The main manifestation of this concept lies of course in the well known SOLIDERE project, a private firm (SOciété LIbanaise pour le DEveloppement et la REconstruction du centre-ville de Beyrouth) created to rehabilitate the urban tissue of the shattered downtown neighborhood of Beirut (Beirut Central District, BCD). As explained by Nabil Beyhum, this company “would simply take over 130 hectares in the city center, thus establishing the biggest instrument of urban management in Lebanon and perhaps the Middle East[19], and took on to itself to rebuild and restore the traditional Beirut city center by giving the initial owners shares within the company (called A-shares, whereas B-shares were destined to the broader public).

The status of the company as a recognized agent for postwar reconstruction was formalized by law, the same that gave additional powers to the CDR. Hence, Decree numb. 1273 of 7 December 1991[20] set the object of “the company” [Solidere] to be “the planning (Aménagement) and reconstruction of one or more of the areas damaged during the hostilities in Lebanon in accordance with a Master Plan and Guiding Layout duly approved and the carrying out of the works necessary for the achievement of this object. The company's object shall include, the development and reconstruction of the area in accordance with the approved Master Plan and Guiding Layout, the sale of the developed lots, the erection of buildings thereon and the sale or lease of such buildings[21].

In that, the government awarded Solidere, a group influenced by Rafic Hariri himself[22], all needed powers to handle the owners and impose a certain concept of public management without setting any appeal procedure or alternative system, which generated much criticism at the time. As pointed out by Nabil Beyhum, “the rightful claimants presented three reasons why they opposed the plan: the project forced them to associate with third parties; it was unconstitutional because it deprived them of their private property, transferring it to a private real estate company; and there was no proof that they were unable to pay or borrow money for the reconstruction of the old city[23].

The fact that the head of the executive body in Lebanon, and many other politicians constituted heavyweight partners in the Solidere project, created a conflict of interest and the collusion of both public and private spaces. For instance, the government exempted Solidere from income tax for a period of ten years from the date of its formation; its shares and shareholders shall be exempted in this capacity[24] ; and decided that the multimillion dollar real estate company shall “be reimbursed for all or part of the cost of works provided for in the two preceding clauses 3 and 4 of this Article[25], i.e. “infrastructure works, such as the water system, electricity, sewage and drainage systems, roads, sidewalks, lightning poles, garages, telecommunications network and all other public facilities and installations in the area concerned[26].

In charge of executing the Master Plan of the rehabilitation of the greater district of Downtown Beirut on behalf of the Lebanese authorities, Solidere continued throughout the 1990’s and the 2000’s to restore the agreed upon area which expanded to include surroundings the company regularly acquired as part of its corporate expansion strategy[27].

Thus, this model took the traditional privatization techniques (which can constitute if well implemented an efficient auxiliary to public action) a step further by delegating entire areas and properties to a specially created firm for this purpose. Many sectors were indeed subjected to a form of privatization in a successful manner, the process being monitored by the newly created Higher Council for Privatization (in 2001), like the motor vehicle inspection which was handed to a private firm and has become efficient ever since[28], or the postal service which was also given out to a private corporation, and came to handle additional administrative procedures for the general public as a private intermediary in exchange of a service charge.

Coming back to the notion of the privatization of public space, the reconstruction of downtown Beirut was a success through an innovative and effective project. However, this model for postwar reconstruction forfeited any reshuffling of the ruined public space by delegating core aspects of it to the private sector. Since the launch of the reconstruction process, public action confirmed a mindset regarding public service as an idea to be neglected, shrinking the notion of public interest to an imperceptible level.

2/ Mismanaged Public Interest

These three instruments we have just covered disregarding the core dimension of the notion of public interest became a rule rather than the exception, hence pinning down a particular concept of public management in which the State decided, in all its sovereignty, to abandon its prerogatives to revive, manage, regulate, defend and arbitrate all matters related to public interest.

Did this applied model, using privatized tools of public management, successfully rebuild the Lebanese economy and modernize durably the country? How efficient was it in regards to a fair and effective management of the Lebanese public interest? Looking at the basic services and the overall infrastructure the Lebanese State was able to provide in the last 20 years, the answer is not very shining, as we observe how the public interest concept had to be sacrificed. Elites who had the harsh duty of reconciling the war-traumatized population with the notion of general interest turned it down and preferred to concentrate on generating additional individual power and influence through state institutions and services provided, depending on the ministries and administrations handled.

As a result, the Lebanese public still does not have access to a 24 hours supply of electricity, or to broadband internet[29], or to a modern mobile network (knowing that Lebanon was the first Arab country to introduce mobile technology back in 1994, and it ranks today at the bottom row of the Arab world as far as mobile advancement is concerned due to lack of modernization and poor management of the mobile licenses leased to the private sector). Lebanon is burdened with a huge public debt reaching 52.5 billion $ (180% of the GDP)[30], because of generous deals struck between a liberal government and associate banks to secure high-interest loans for the Treasury back at the beginning of the reconstruction process. In the meantime, a large part of the population cannot access basic health services because hospitals often refuse uninsured patients covered only by the National Social Security Funds, as the latter will go bankrupt before the postwar generation would reach the age to benefit from its pension system. 

Also, post-war generations are prevented from opening innovative businesses because of the archaic entrepreneurship framework in the country. The system of exclusive importing licenses stands as one of the non liberal policies in Lebanon, which distorts the internal market, thus contributing in the welfare of a semi-rentier under-taxed category of small and large traders, along with businessmen benefiting from public contracts and leases through clientelistic, clanic and sectarian connections with the officials in power. Except for the booming franchising system and the well established touristic sector, little has been done to modernize other potential niches or both the agricultural and industrial sectors in the country. Last but not least, the environment issue remains at the bottom of the policy priorities. The management of solid waste costs 150 million dollars a year of public money[31] used to pay a private firm to collect and treat the garbage solely in Beirut and Mount Lebanon, only two out of the five Lebanese governorates. Moreover, no facility for waste treatment or recycling complexes appears among the policymakers’ agenda, despite a well-known history regarding the disastrous management of uncontrolled waste disposal sites such as the ones in Borj Hammoud or Saida.

The cas d’école of this model of privatizing public space led to a philosophy of governance based on the erection of sanctuaries for the few, which has established an infrastructure allowing a clear-cut separation of the wealthy from the rest of the population without designing and introducing some type of sophisticated form of civic solidarity. Public sphere constitutes “an idea based on an ideal of a common element, an element shared by all citizens and enforced by law[32], which would involve necessary concessions from private entities in favor of ensuring a harmonious coexistence within a given society, under the protection of political institutions. Parallel to the unanimous political slogans withstanding the return to legality, i.e. to the State in the aftermath of the civil war, the debate over the Lebanese representation of public space was completely absent, knowing that the cleavage between the spheres of home and street that had emerged during the war, i.e. the primary location for safety against the space controlled by militias and violence, had shaped a new mental scheme for the next generation of Lebanese.

This fragmentation of space[33] was ignored by Lebanese politicians in the last 20 years, which further crippled any public action towards the rehabilitation of the public sphere. Consequently, growing restriction of access of the average Lebanese from public areas has become a rooted mindset: Horsh Beirut (or the Pines of Beirut), the largest green area of Beirut is closed; the Golf Club in Ouzai (South of Beirut) is a select club established on a public lot rented by State holders to a private holding for 1.100 Lebanese Pounds a year[34] ; marinas and beaches have become private and closed territories that require a membership or a high fee access. Even traditional cafés representing the heartbeat of the Lebanese intellectual scene (Modca Cafe or Café de Paris)[35] have disappeared[36]. More importantly, the galloping real estate speculation, ignored by the public authorities (among whom many large land and real estate owners and businessmen), has pushed average Lebanese away from the capital Beirut where renting and buying prices reached unprecedented peaks in a decade. And there is still no comprehensive vision among Lebanese policymakers to create new transportation means for the newly formed families having to establish themselves in Beirut’s close and further suburbs in order to facilitate their access to their workplace in the capital[37] which continues to concentrate an astronomic portion of the overall economic activity.

Here probably lies one of the most irresponsible policies, confirming the political unwillingness to recreate a public space for the Lebanese society, and which can be illustrated by studying the case of the sacrificed sector of public transport in Lebanon.

3/ A Case Study: Sacrificed Public Transport

Since the dismantlement of the tramway system in Beirut in the 1960’s, all the way through the destroyed railway infrastructure and the halt of the national bus transportation system as a result of the civil war, the official policies advantaged the overall and massive use of cars and automobiles. Twenty years later, there is still no tramway, bus, ferry or any kind of substantial public transportation system in Lebanon, except for the privately owned taxis (services) and minivans, and still no nutshell of a vision towards a more comprehensive approach to public transport in the country: “in Lebanon, transportation is regulated and organized by at least five ministries, and three other non-ministerial entities not including the Parliament, the President or individual municipalities. Where agencies do not communicate there is not only little opportunity for the development of a single comprehensive regulatory and planning structure for solving transportation problems, but solutions that extend beyond transportation may never be identified and evaluated[38].

Talking about the electrical trolley (tramway), Angus Gavin, head of urban planning for Solidere had stated that “these historical transportation uses are undesirable and incompatible with the new vision of the downtown[39], a typical view that summarizes the mindset of public and private officials regarding alternative transportation means. At a time where modern cities like Istanbul, Rabat and Beijing have given a new life to the use of tramways within densely urban areas, Beirut’s transportation system remains underdeveloped (the same goes subsequently for potentially greater economic development) because of the lack of vision of its policymakers on this issue. Other than the CDR plan of 1995 envisioning a (costly and incoherent) subway system in Greater Beirut, public transportation projects and initiatives from the public sphere remain inexistent, at a time when “a transportation system built on the automobile is expensive and inefficient. In terms of capacity per lane, single passenger vehicles have the lowest efficiency of all modes. Public transportation is a great way to improve transportation efficiency[40].

Even when observing the measures taken to secure and regulate the automobile transportation sector in Lebanon, one can confidently point out the absence of coherence and care for public safety: the inconsistent use of cement blocks, little and unsynchronized traffic lights, poor lane marking and road signs, the nonexistence of long term planning and lack of enforcement by police forces, all lead to an incredibly high number of deaths and injuries due to car and truck accidents every year[41].

One of the factors explaining the great attachment of Lebanese public officials to the use of privately-owned cars and automobiles can be found by analyzing the State Budget, as automobile-related taxes generate considerable revenue for a considerably indebted Treasury. When adding up all public revenue items related to the car industry in Lebanon[42], it shoots up to reach the third largest revenue generating item with 1,398 billion $ for 2010 (hence higher than the telecom revenues attracting around 900 million dollars to the Treasury per year), with a slight increase from 2009 with 1,385 billion $[43]. Given the void in researching any fiscal alternative, it is difficult for the present public officials, who have been opposing any fiscal reform, to adopt a radically different policy orientation which would consequently decrease the ownership and use of cars in Lebanon.

Knowing that the first two "revenues" items for the State constitute resorting to debt (either through Treasury Bonds emissions, or access to regional and foreign loans and grants)[44], followed in second position by the VAT (2,13 billion $ for 2010)[45], which is known to be an unfair but necessary consumption tax, public officials have not yet generated the needed political will to diversify the revenues for the State in order to ensure sovereignty, independence and a more just fiscal system that would sensibly reach higher revenues, rentier sectors and polluting industries. By failing to address public finance reform, public officials disregarded a crucial instrument for managing public interest and ensuring state resources to plan and execute public policies. This is why the current model of management of public interest relies on financing public projects and programs through private donations and international organizations, hence leading to a hybrid public management model which focuses on privatizing the very notion of public space.

4/ Harirism vs Aounism, or the perpetuation of the lost notion of public interest.

Up until today, Lebanon’s public service could not reach a level capable of designing and implementing complex, sophisticated and interconnected public networks and programs handling specific sectors of public interest. As a consequence, the State could not enter the “Organizers’ Era [L’Ere des Organisateurs] as conceptualized by James Burnham[46], providing highly qualified expertise indispensable to a sound public management of state affairs.

Post-war political leaders, themselves actors at various levels in the conflict, could not produce the needed mindset shift into a political enterprise destined to reshape the notion of public interest and set a infrastructure that would wisely balance both private and public areas. The Era of Harirism that started in 1992 and then witnessed the creation of the Future Movement that was inherited by the son of late Rafic Hariri[47], Saad Hariri, and belongs to what is known today as the 14 March coalition, perpetuated the collusion between private and public interests. The State kept delegating prerogatives to close partners from the private sector, privileging the profits of oligarch-type groups and clans, without putting the necessary effort in durably modernizing the country and caring for its population. The Solidere example is one of many illustrations, where political effort and persuasion was massively invested in favor of Beirut’s Downtown (and investors close to the Hariri clan) without similar actions being successfully undertaken in other parts of the country.

Political rivals to the 14 March group, the 8 March coalition, mainly gathering heavily armed Hezbollah, the Amal Movement of Speaker of the Parliament Nabih Berri and General Aoun’s Free Patriotic Movement, hold a different position on public management. Hezbollah and Amal have been opposing Hariri’s liberal choices in the last decade, as their representatives in Parliament and in the Cabinet (where the opposition was always present through power sharing agreements) worked with former head of state, General Emile Lahoud (1998-2007) to counter Hariri’s policies. As for General Aoun, his return to Lebanon in May 2005 revived the FPM party, which later stroke a strong alliance with Hariri’s traditional rivals and positioned himself as a partisan of public management reform.

Since July 2011, the 8 March coalition took over the key positions of the State, in particular the government[48] headed by Prime Minister Najib Mikati (a pro-8 March successful businessman, though close to Hariri’s liberal mindset), when alliance shifts weakened the 14 march coalition and ousted Prime Minister Saad Hariri from power after the Parliament - an unprecedented action - withdrew its confidence from the Cabinet in January 2011.

Nonetheless, despite a few measures adopted by the new government lowering some costs in the telecommunications sector and promises made in the direction of “improving the Lebanese general welfare[49], the 8 March forces have yet to approach the Lebanese public with an alternative comprehensive vision towards reviving the notion of public interest. On the contrary, public service continues to be an object of competition for control and power, as depicted in many situations. For instance, the incident in May 2011 between pro-8 March Minister Charbel Nahas of the Telecommunications and the Internal Security Forces (whose director is loyal to 14 March forces) as to who would get his hands on telecommunications equipment related to a third cellular network stored in the ministry’s building, showed in broad daylight the intense competition for state resources as carried out between the rival factions while holding official positions[50].

Within the 8 March group, the strategy of the Amal Movement vis-à-vis state public policies remains (since the 1990’s) to maintain the capacity of placing party members and loyalists within State institutions to increase influence and control of its leader Nabih Berri. As for Hezbollah, too preoccupied protecting and defending the notion of Resistance against Israel, its MPs and ministers did not leave trace of a durable sustainable public action so far, preferring to give the higher hand on reform and change[51] to its other ally within the 8 March coalition, the FPM of General Michel Aoun. However, the public record of FPM’s main figures could not rise above the level of populist moves and measures intended to strike points with an uninformed public opinion for electoral purposes, as projects and intended reforms lack the basic elements of planning, supervising and evaluation techniques. For instance, when FPM Minister of Power and Hydraulic Resources Gebran Bassil contemplated the idea to import cars that would work on propane gas, there was no focus or preparatory work on the needed infrastructure such a reform would require on the ground.

Up until today, the figures of 8 March offer no global initiative regarding the revision of fiscal policies, public transport, public health, upholding the advantages of a greener economy, introducing an auto-entrepreneurship legislation or modernizing vital infrastructures, as they continue to authorize costly public works for tunnels and bridges financed by international donors. Lately, in September 2011, a project destined to reform the electricity sector, aimed at increasing the power production and the capacity of distribution in Lebanon, was passed by the new government and now awaits its adoption by the Parliament. The fact that pro-8 March policymakers refuse any type of controlling body (to supervise how 1.2 billion $ will be spent by the Ministry of Power and Hydraulic Resources) confirms how it has become common for the Lebanese political landscape to reject any form of transparency and accountability in governance affairs. Additionally, the new government faces the challenge of managing newly uncovered public assets: the gas reserves within the Lebanese maritime borders. Director of the Lebanese Center for Policy Studies, Sami Atallah, recently turned the policymakers’ attention towards the necessity to “translate gas revenues into self-sustaining growth accompanied by improvements to socioeconomic welfare[52], keeping in mind that “the road to effective management is mired with difficulties that could easily overwhelm the Lebanese government[53].

*

If the philosophy of Harirism is stained by the crying conflict of interest between public and private spheres, the conception of public interest as carried by the Aounist ideology is burdened with a populist notion of public management. Change in power has yet to produce changes in the way to approach public administration as both an instrument and an object of reform to support any sustainable political enterprise. Nine months after it decided to shape its own controlled Cabinet, the 8 March coalition shows many gaps in its vision of public management which has not yet matured to shape an alternative spirit vis-à-vis public management. In order to achieve the vast legislative renovation needed, Lebanese politicians are still to acquire the leadership capacity to finally prepare the Lebanese public to accept and respect a Rule of Law that would fairly protect the citizens’ genuine public space.

As such, no formation within the current political spectrum holds a coherent vision for a sane governance of a 21st Century Lebanon ; the notion of public management remains a broken concept, cursed at the margins of political reality./.


[1] On the notion of public management, read GIBERT, Patrick. Politiques et management public, L’Harmattan, Paris, 1996.

[2] KISIRWANI, Maroun. The Lebanese Bureaucracy under stress. How did it survive? Beirut Review, n°4, Lebanese Center for Policy Studies, Autumn 1992.

[3] KISIRWANI, Maroun. The Rehabilitation and Reconstruction of Lebanon. In WHITE, Paul J., LOGAN, William S., Remaking the Middle East, Berg, Oxford New York, 1997, available on http://ddc.aub.edu.lb/projects/pspa/kisirwani.html

[4] Expression borrowed from OLIVENNES, Denis, BAVEREZ, Nicolas. L’impuissance publique, Calmann-Lévy, Paris, 1989.

[5] PFISTER, Thierry. La République des Fonctionnaires, Albin Michel, Paris, 1988.

[6] KISIRWANI, Maroun, PARLE, William M., Assessing the Impact of the Post Civil War Period on the Lebanese Bureaucracy: A View from Inside. Journal of Asian and African Studies, vol. 22, n°1-2, 1987, available on http://ddc.aub.edu.lb/projects/pspa/impact.html

[7] On the successes of Rafic Hariri in economic recovery, cf. STEWART, Dona J. Economic Recovery and Reconstruction in Postwar Beirut. Geographical Review, Vol. 86, N°4, Oct. 1996, p. 498.

[8] KISIRWANI, Maroun, PARLE, William M., Assessing the Impact of the Post Civil War Period on the Lebanese Bureaucracy, op. cit.

[9] For more details, cf. EL MUFTI, Karim. Place et rôle des Hauts Fonctionnaires dans la machine-Etat au Liban, Mémoire de DEA, Université Saint-Joseph, 2003, pp. 23-24.

[10] A major cause preventing the filling of what is estimated at 10.000 vacancies within the different sectors of the Lebanese public administration. Source: OMSAR, Strategy for the Reform and Development of Public Administration, 2001.

[11] According to the Lebanese Transparency Association, Lebanon received a score of three out of ten (ten being the cleanest) and ranked at the position of 78 among the 133 ranked countries in 2003. See also LTA paper: Reconstructing Survey, The Political Economy of Corruption in Post-War Lebanon, 2007.

[12] See the Public Reform Sector section on the UNDP website: http://www.undp.org.lb/programme/governance/institutionbuilding/index.cfm

[13] By Decree n°1273 aiming at the amendment of certain provisions of Law Decree n°5 of 1977, promulgated on 7 December 1991.

[14] KISIRWANI, Maroun. The Rehabilitation and Reconstruction of Lebanon. In WHITE, Paul J., LOGAN, William S., Remaking the Middle East, Berg, Oxford New York, 1997, available on http://ddc.aub.edu.lb/projects/pspa/kisirwani.html

[15] VLOEBERGHS, Ward. The Genesis of a Mosque: Negotiating Sacred Space in Downtown Beirut, European University Institute Working Papers, RCAS 2008/17, p. 7.

[16] The Legislative Decree No. 112/59 (Public Sector Staff Regulations), from 1959 continues to regulates conditions of employment of persons in the public sector.

[17] The highest grade within the Lebanese public administration, the first grade category, is paid roughly 3,000,000 Lebanese Pounds (2.000$) per month.

[18] The head of the newly established VAT department in 2001 was M. Chawqi Hamad, a Lebanese-Canadian specially recruited for this position ; he was advised by the former director of VAT department in Belgium, M. Willie Dierick.

[19] BEYHUM, Nabil. The Crisis of Urban Culture: The Three Reconstruction Plans for Beirut. The Beirut Review, n°4, Fall 1992.

[20] According to Law 117/1991.

[21] Article 3-I of Decree 1273 of 1991.

[22] As explained by Ward Vloeberghs : “Even though he officially owned less than a tenth of the shares, it was evident that Hariri, who would continue to make of Solidere his hobbyhorse during the following years, now held a particularly strong position among the investors”. In VLOEBERGHS, Ward. The Genesis of a Mosque, op. cit, p. 8.

[23] BEYHUM, Nabil. The Crisis of Urban Culture, op. cit. For Solidere’s presentation of the project, cf. GAVIN, Angus, MALUF, Ramez. Beirut Reborn: The Restoration and Development of the Beirut Central District, London, Academy Editions, 1996.

[24] Article 3-VII(3) of Decree 1273 of 1991.

[25] Article 3-VII(5) of Decree 1273 of 1991.

[26] Idem

[27] Solidere’s real estate ownership in Beirut expanded from initially 1.8 million square meters of properties to approximately 3 million square meters it has acquired, today allotted into 395 projects. Source: Le Commerce du Levant, September 2011. Solidere also expanded its investments abroad, namely in the United Arab Emirates where it invests and acts as a regular real estate firm.

[28] However, no concrete evaluation was undertaken in order to determine why the primary objective of this policy (taking old, dangerous, malfunctioning, and polluting cars off the streets) was not achieved.

[29] At the end of 2010, Lebanon ranked number 100 worldwide out of 222 countries in terms of internet broadband public access, according to the International Telecommunication Union of the United Nations, source: Le Commerce du Levant, September 2011.

[30] National Debt witnessed an astronomical rise since 1992: from 2 billion $ in 1992, 15 billion $ in 1998 and 38 billion $ in 2004, source: Ministry of Finance datasheets, www.finance.gov.lb

[31] Figure for 2007, source: The Monthly, Information International publication, issue 68, April 2008.

[32] DAHLGREN, Peter, RELIEU, Marc. L'espace public et l'internet. Structure, espace et communication. Réseaux, 2000, volume 18, n°100, pp. 163-164, available on http://www.persee.fr/web/revues/home/prescript/article/reso_0751-7971_2000_num_18_100_2217. For a further analysis on the notion of public sphere, read VAN DAMME, Stéphane. Farewell Habermas ? Deux décennies d’études sur l’espace public. Les Dossiers du Grihl, June 2007, available on http://dossiersgrihl.revues.org/682.

[33] Read BARAKAT L., CHAMUSSY H., Les espaces publics à Beyrouth, Géocarrefour, vol. 77, n° 3, 2002.

[34] Which corresponds to less than a dollar a year, based on a contract with the State back in 1964. This contract initially planned that the land was to be used for a “public service” by the renting company. Even though the agreement was constantly renewed by the successive governments, the rent was never revised up until this day. Cf. An Nahar, 6 April 2011.

[35] “Modca cafe to serve its last coffee after 32 years on Hamra Street”, The Daily Star, 28 February 2003.

[36] The history of Beirut Cafes is studied by Lebanese anthropologist, Dr. Chawqi Douaihy who approached the notion of public space through Beirut cafes, cf. مقاهي بيروت الشعبية: 1950-1990، دار الهنار، 2005 [Cafes for the Masses in Beirut: 1900-1950, Dar An Nahar, 2005].

[37] It can take up to one hour and a half to reach one’s workplace from a close suburb into Beirut by car.

[38] NABTI, Jumana. Leveraging Infrastructure. Sustainable Bus Rapid Transit Route Planning in Beirut, Lebanon, Master Thesis in City Planning, Massachusetts Institute of Technology (MIT), June 2004, pp. 11-12.

[39] In NABTI, Jumana. Leveraging Infrastructure. Op. cit., p. 30.

[40] Ibid, p. 12.

[41] In 2010, 4.583 accidents were officially recorded, causing the death of 549 persons and injuring 6.517 others, source: YASA for Road Safety, cf. www.yasa.com.lb

[42] i.e. Taxes on petroleum, on car imports, on car registrations, motor vehicle inspection (mécanique) and driving license fees.

[43] Source: 2010 Public Finance Report, Ministry of Finance, Republic of Lebanon, available on www.finance.gov.lb

[44] Which can amount three to five billion dollars a year, cf. www.finance.gov.lb

[45] The VAT has know an extraordinary ascension in revenues since its successful implementation in 2002, when the first year generated 662 million $ (in eleven months), hence increasing the total state revenues by 29.5% at that time. For more insight on the VAT policy in Lebanon, cf. EL MUFTI, Karim. ­­Place et rôle des Hauts Fonctionnaires dans la machine-Etat au Liban, Mémoire de DEA, Université Saint-Joseph, 2003, pp. 80-96.

[46] BURNHAM, James. L’Ere des organisateurs, Calman-Lévy, Paris, 1946.

[47] Former Prime Minister Rafic Hariri was assassinated in Beirut on 14th February 2005 in a car bomb terrorist attack.

[48] Whereas it used to share power with a parliamentarian majority held by the 14 March group (2005-2011).

[49] Point 32 of the Ministerial Declaration presented before the Parliament by the Government headed by Najib Mikati, July 2011.

[50] This incident led to the resignation of outgoing Interior Minister Ziad Baroud after the officials of the Internal Security Forces under his command refused to carry out his orders to withdraw from the scene.

[51] Name of the official parliamentarian bloc of the FPM.

[52] ATALLAH, Sami. Managing Lebanon’s Gas: Pursuing a Pipe Dream? Al Akhbar English Edition, 15 September 2011.

[53] Ibid.