Lebanon crises leave LGBTQ community with no safe place
The combined effects of 's economic meltdown, last year's and Covid-19 lockdowns have left the community more vulnerable than ever, warned a report published Thursday.
The blast at a port warehouse that devastated swathes of the city on August 4 last year had a disproportionate impact on the lesbian, gay, bisexual, transgender and queer community, the Oxfam charity said.
One of the world's largest ever non-nuclear explosions killed more than 200 people and left thousands homeless, including in the culturally diverse neighbourhoods of Mar Mikhail and Gemmayzeh.
"Being home to many queer residents and queer-friendly restaurants, bars, clubs, community centres and public spaces, these neighbourhoods offered a refuge for queer individuals," Oxfam said in its report.
The slow pace of reconstruction and the risk of gentrification if and when these areas are finally rehabilitated could result in the loss of LGBTQ hubs being more than temporary.
Oxfam said the LGBTQ community in Lebanon was now "facing a housing crisis" and that more than half of the individuals interviewed had their homes damaged in the blast.
The report said "39 percent do not have a safe living space, and a further 11 percent had been forced back with their families where many said they faced abusive, unsafe or unaccepting environments."
The blast has been "the final straw" for the community's people in Beirut, said Nizar Aouad, Oxfam's Lebanon gender advisor, adding that "it destroyed whatever safe spaces were left in the city".
Some of the bars, night clubs and community spaces where the queer community used to gather safely have also been closed down by successive lockdowns caused by the Covid-19 pandemic.
Chances they will reopen now that restrictions are being lifted have been curtailed by a devastating economic crisis, which the World Bank has described as one of the world's worst since the 1850s.
Religiously diverse Lebanon is one of the Middle East's more liberal countries, but the LGBTQ community continues to face systematic social, economic and legal discrimination.