<p>Anger mounted in Lebanon on Wednesday as rescuers searched for survivors of a cataclysmic explosion at Beirut port that wreaked destruction across the city, killing at least 113 people, wounding thousands and plunging crisis-stricken Lebanon further into the abyss.</p>.<p>The blast on Tuesday, apparently triggered by a fire igniting 2,750 tonnes of ammonium nitrate fertiliser left unsecured in a warehouse of Beirut port, was heard as far as Cyprus, some 150 miles (240 kilometres) away.</p>.<p>It struck the Lebanese capital like an earthquake, with dozens still missing on Wednesday, thousands of people left destitute and thousands more cramming into overwhelmed hospitals for treatment.</p>.<p>One doctor, his own head bandaged like those of his patients, described the scene as "Armageddon".</p>.<p>"Wounded people bleeding out in the middle of the street, others lying on the ground in the hospital courtyard," said Dr Antoine Qurban outside Hotel Dieu Hospital in central Beirut.</p>.<p>And as volunteers led the clean-up effort, public outrage mounted over how such a vast haul of highly combustible material -- sometimes used for homemade bombs -- had been stored next to a densely populated area for at least six years.</p>.<p><strong>READ: <a href="https://www.deccanherald.com/international/world-news-politics/lebanese-pm-hassan-diab-appeals-for-help-after-beirut-blast-869790.html" target="_blank">Lebanese PM Hassan Diab appeals for help after Beirut blast</a></strong></p>.<p>The government vowed to investigate and the cabinet urged the military to place those responsible for storing the substance under house arrest.</p>.<p>But Lina Daoud, a 45-year-old resident of the devastated Mar Mikhail district where the explosion had strewn bodies in the street, blasted the country's politicians as "enemies of the state".</p>.<p>"They killed our dreams, our future," she said. "Lebanon was a heaven, they have made it hell."</p>.<p>An initial explosion and fire at the port had sent many people to balconies and rooftops where they were filming when the fertiliser exploded, sending out a massive shockwave across the city.</p>.<p>In an instant, the blast left destruction likened to that caused by the country's 1975-1990 civil war, levelling buildings several hundred metres (yards) away.</p>.<p>City mayor Abboud said the devastation may have left 300,000 people temporarily homeless, adding to the cash-strapped country's economic misery with an estimated $3 billion in damages.</p>.<p>"Even in the worst years of the civil war, we didn't see so much damage over such a large area," said analyst Kamal Tarabey.</p>.<p><strong>READ: <a href="https://www.deccanherald.com/international/all-you-need-to-know-about-the-lebanon-explosions-that-killed-over-100-people-869791.html" target="_blank">All you need to know about the Lebanon explosions</a></strong></p>.<p>The disaster came with Lebanon already on its knees with a months-long economic crisis and currency devaluation sparking spiralling poverty even before the coronavirus pandemic hit.</p>.<p>The embattled government of Prime Minister Hassan Diab vowed that "those responsible for this catastrophe will pay the price".</p>.<p>The ammonium nitrate had been stored in a rundown port warehouse with cracks in its walls, officials told AFP.</p>.<p>Security forces launched an investigation in 2019 after the warehouse started to exude a strange odour, concluding the "dangerous" chemicals needed to be removed, but the action was not taken.</p>.<p>Analyst and Georgetown University professor Faysal Itani was not optimistic that anybody would be held accountable.</p>.<p>"There is a pervasive culture of negligence, petty corruption and blame-shifting endemic to the Lebanese bureaucracy, all overseen by a political class defined by its incompetence and contempt for the public good," he wrote in a New York Times op-ed.</p>.<p>"These politicians are well practised in shifting the blame."</p>.<p>Messages of support poured in from around the world, including Britain's Queen Elizabeth who said she was "deeply saddened" by the disaster.</p>.<p>France said it would send three planes of aid, followed by a visit Thursday by President Emmanuel Macron.</p>.<p>US Secretary of State Mike Pompeo offered assistance, while Defense Secretary Mark Esper played down President Donald Trump's earlier suggestion that a bomb had been responsible.</p>.<p><strong>READ: <a href="https://www.deccanherald.com/international/world-news-politics/will-boost-emergency-aid-to-lebanon-says-un-870041.html" target="_blank">Will boost emergency aid to Lebanon, says UN</a></strong></p>.<p>"Most believe that it was an accident as reported," Esper told the Aspen Security Forum.</p>.<p>The UN's Food and Agriculture Organization warned Wednesday that the destruction of the port and grain silos would cause critical severe flour shortages, in a country heavily reliant on imports.</p>.<p>Social media user voiced outrage at the government, saying such a disaster could only strike because of the ineptitude and corruption riddling Lebanon's institutions.</p>.<p>Hospitals already stretched to the brink by a spike in coronavirus cases were pushed to new limits by the influx of wounded and were forced to turn many away.</p>.<p>Lebanon has recorded 5,417 cases of <a href="https://www.deccanherald.com/coronavirus-live-news-covid-19-latest-updates.html" target="_blank">Covid-19</a>, including 68 deaths.</p>.<p>"We've had some dark days in Lebanon over the years but this is something else," said Rami Rifai, a 38-year-old engineer.</p>.<p>He spoke to AFP from a hospital where his two daughters were receiving treatment after sustaining cuts despite being half a kilometre from the seat of the blast.</p>.<p>"We already had the economic crisis, a government of thieves and coronavirus. I didn't think it could get worse but now I don't know if this country can get up again," he said.</p>.<p>In the Netherlands, an UN-backed tribunal said it had suspended a verdict on the 2005 murder in a huge Beirut bomb blast of former Lebanese premier Rafic Hariri, scheduled for Friday, following the latest carnage.</p>
<p>Anger mounted in Lebanon on Wednesday as rescuers searched for survivors of a cataclysmic explosion at Beirut port that wreaked destruction across the city, killing at least 113 people, wounding thousands and plunging crisis-stricken Lebanon further into the abyss.</p>.<p>The blast on Tuesday, apparently triggered by a fire igniting 2,750 tonnes of ammonium nitrate fertiliser left unsecured in a warehouse of Beirut port, was heard as far as Cyprus, some 150 miles (240 kilometres) away.</p>.<p>It struck the Lebanese capital like an earthquake, with dozens still missing on Wednesday, thousands of people left destitute and thousands more cramming into overwhelmed hospitals for treatment.</p>.<p>One doctor, his own head bandaged like those of his patients, described the scene as "Armageddon".</p>.<p>"Wounded people bleeding out in the middle of the street, others lying on the ground in the hospital courtyard," said Dr Antoine Qurban outside Hotel Dieu Hospital in central Beirut.</p>.<p>And as volunteers led the clean-up effort, public outrage mounted over how such a vast haul of highly combustible material -- sometimes used for homemade bombs -- had been stored next to a densely populated area for at least six years.</p>.<p><strong>READ: <a href="https://www.deccanherald.com/international/world-news-politics/lebanese-pm-hassan-diab-appeals-for-help-after-beirut-blast-869790.html" target="_blank">Lebanese PM Hassan Diab appeals for help after Beirut blast</a></strong></p>.<p>The government vowed to investigate and the cabinet urged the military to place those responsible for storing the substance under house arrest.</p>.<p>But Lina Daoud, a 45-year-old resident of the devastated Mar Mikhail district where the explosion had strewn bodies in the street, blasted the country's politicians as "enemies of the state".</p>.<p>"They killed our dreams, our future," she said. "Lebanon was a heaven, they have made it hell."</p>.<p>An initial explosion and fire at the port had sent many people to balconies and rooftops where they were filming when the fertiliser exploded, sending out a massive shockwave across the city.</p>.<p>In an instant, the blast left destruction likened to that caused by the country's 1975-1990 civil war, levelling buildings several hundred metres (yards) away.</p>.<p>City mayor Abboud said the devastation may have left 300,000 people temporarily homeless, adding to the cash-strapped country's economic misery with an estimated $3 billion in damages.</p>.<p>"Even in the worst years of the civil war, we didn't see so much damage over such a large area," said analyst Kamal Tarabey.</p>.<p><strong>READ: <a href="https://www.deccanherald.com/international/all-you-need-to-know-about-the-lebanon-explosions-that-killed-over-100-people-869791.html" target="_blank">All you need to know about the Lebanon explosions</a></strong></p>.<p>The disaster came with Lebanon already on its knees with a months-long economic crisis and currency devaluation sparking spiralling poverty even before the coronavirus pandemic hit.</p>.<p>The embattled government of Prime Minister Hassan Diab vowed that "those responsible for this catastrophe will pay the price".</p>.<p>The ammonium nitrate had been stored in a rundown port warehouse with cracks in its walls, officials told AFP.</p>.<p>Security forces launched an investigation in 2019 after the warehouse started to exude a strange odour, concluding the "dangerous" chemicals needed to be removed, but the action was not taken.</p>.<p>Analyst and Georgetown University professor Faysal Itani was not optimistic that anybody would be held accountable.</p>.<p>"There is a pervasive culture of negligence, petty corruption and blame-shifting endemic to the Lebanese bureaucracy, all overseen by a political class defined by its incompetence and contempt for the public good," he wrote in a New York Times op-ed.</p>.<p>"These politicians are well practised in shifting the blame."</p>.<p>Messages of support poured in from around the world, including Britain's Queen Elizabeth who said she was "deeply saddened" by the disaster.</p>.<p>France said it would send three planes of aid, followed by a visit Thursday by President Emmanuel Macron.</p>.<p>US Secretary of State Mike Pompeo offered assistance, while Defense Secretary Mark Esper played down President Donald Trump's earlier suggestion that a bomb had been responsible.</p>.<p><strong>READ: <a href="https://www.deccanherald.com/international/world-news-politics/will-boost-emergency-aid-to-lebanon-says-un-870041.html" target="_blank">Will boost emergency aid to Lebanon, says UN</a></strong></p>.<p>"Most believe that it was an accident as reported," Esper told the Aspen Security Forum.</p>.<p>The UN's Food and Agriculture Organization warned Wednesday that the destruction of the port and grain silos would cause critical severe flour shortages, in a country heavily reliant on imports.</p>.<p>Social media user voiced outrage at the government, saying such a disaster could only strike because of the ineptitude and corruption riddling Lebanon's institutions.</p>.<p>Hospitals already stretched to the brink by a spike in coronavirus cases were pushed to new limits by the influx of wounded and were forced to turn many away.</p>.<p>Lebanon has recorded 5,417 cases of <a href="https://www.deccanherald.com/coronavirus-live-news-covid-19-latest-updates.html" target="_blank">Covid-19</a>, including 68 deaths.</p>.<p>"We've had some dark days in Lebanon over the years but this is something else," said Rami Rifai, a 38-year-old engineer.</p>.<p>He spoke to AFP from a hospital where his two daughters were receiving treatment after sustaining cuts despite being half a kilometre from the seat of the blast.</p>.<p>"We already had the economic crisis, a government of thieves and coronavirus. I didn't think it could get worse but now I don't know if this country can get up again," he said.</p>.<p>In the Netherlands, an UN-backed tribunal said it had suspended a verdict on the 2005 murder in a huge Beirut bomb blast of former Lebanese premier Rafic Hariri, scheduled for Friday, following the latest carnage.</p>