Former Lebanese MP assaults bakery worker who accused his party of crisis
A former Lebanese MP assaulted a worker on Friday after a dispute over and after she allegedly blamed his party for the country’s
CCTV footage at a bakery in Rabweh, northeast of Beirut, showed Hikmat Dib waiting to pay for a pack of the traditional Arabic bread. He claims to have told one of the workers to let an elderly man buy a second pack after the latter pleaded, but the woman refused.
"This is all because of you," the worker allegedly told Dib, in reference to his Free Patriotic Movement (FPM) whose founder is currently the president.
Dib then picks a tiny basket and throws it at the woman, before being shoved by a man at the cashier.
حصل إشكال بين النائب السابق وإحدى الموظفات في فرن في منطقة ، وذلك بعدما تدخّل مستفسراً عن سبب عدم إعطاء أحد الزبائن، سوري الجنسية، ربطتي خبز بدل الواحدة.. (1)
— Mulhak - ملحق (@Mulhak)
Footage then cuts to Dib coming out of his car with a gun in his hand, but the former lawmaker told local media that he only got his gun after being "attacked" by two men from the bakery.
Other reports say the men only went out to speak to Dib.
Dib, who was trending on Twitter after the footage of him surfaced, blasted his critics for not fact checking before sharing "lies and fake news."
"This elderly Lebanese man who I stood up for…was not fitting for the owner of the bakery. Of course, when has our dignity and interest ever been important to bakery owners," Dib wrote on Twitter, accusing them of lying about what happened.
وصلت وقاحتكم إنو تكذبوا وتلفقوا خبرية على ذوقكم دون التأكد من الحقيقة ولو بإتصال بسيط. هيدا الرجال اللبناني المسن يلي دافعت عن حقّو بربطة الخبز ما ناسب صاحبة الفرن.
— Hikmat Dib (@DibHikmat)
طبعا ليش ايمتى ناسبهم أصحاب الأفران كرامتنا و مصلحتنا.
اما مشهد السلاح فسببه الهجوم عليي من عدة شبان وذلك لردعهم.
Many in Lebanon blame the FPM and their allies for being behind the country’s unprecedented economic crisis, which has seen the currency collapse, inflation skyrocket and hundreds of thousands leave the country in the past few years.
The FPM says it is not responsible, arguing that this was a result of decades of poor management and rampant corruption.
Due to the war in Ukraine and like many other countries, Lebanon is currently witnessing , with long queues of people seen waiting outside bakeries to buy a pack.
While different types of breads are reportedly in abundance, there is a shortage in the traditional Arabic bread, a Lebanese dietary staple.
Some observers have said wheat was in fact available but was being smuggled to Syria or hoarded, similar to what has happened previously with fuel and medicines.
Caretaker Economy Minister Amin Salam said earlier this week that the crisis should be solved within the coming days as Lebanon expects grain imports to arrive soon, thanks to a World Bank loan approved earlier this year. He added that there are
The which stored most of the country’s grains were destroyed in the August 2020 blast.