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| Workers in Qatar load a field hospital onto a flight for Beirut to help Lebanon's already stretched health services treat the more than 4,000 people injured in Tuesday's monster blast |
Emergency medical aid and pop-up field hospitals were
dispatched to Lebanon Wednesday along with rescue experts and tracking dogs, as
the world reached out to the victims of the explosion that devastated Beirut.
The blast centred on the city's port caused massive
destruction and killed at least 113 people, heaping misery on a country already
in crisis.
Gulf states were among the first to respond, with
Qatar sending mobile hospitals to ease pressure on Lebanon's medical system,
already strained by the coronavirus pandemic.
A Qatari air force plane with a cargo of hundreds of
collapsible beds, generators and burn sheets touched down in Beirut in the
first of a convoy of flights to the Mediterranean country.
Medical supplies from Kuwait also arrived, as the
Lebanese Red Cross said more than 4,000 people were being treated for injuries
after the explosion, which sent glass shards and debris flying.
A Greek C-130 army transport plane bearing a dozen rescuers
landed at Beirut's airport, itself damaged in the catastrophic explosion.
Lebanon's Prime Minister Hassan Diab has called on
"friendly countries" to support a nation already reeling from its
worst economic crisis in decades as well as the impact of the coronavirus.
As emergency crews hauled survivors from the rubble of
demolished buildings, France said it was sending search and rescue experts
aboard three military planes loaded with a mobile clinic and tonnes of medical
and sanitary supplies.
President Emmanuel Macron is to travel to Lebanon on
Thursday, becoming the first world leader to visit Beirut after the disaster,
as France seeks to swiftly push reconstruction in its former colony.
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French Securite Civile (Civil Security) officers at
Roissy airport, near Paris, stand `
ready as France sends three planes with
search and rescue personnel and medical
equipment to Beirut
|
"France is at the side of Lebanon. Always,"
Macron tweeted in Arabic.
Cyprus -- which lies just 150 miles (240 kilometres)
to the northwest and where Tuesday's blast were both heard and sighted -- said
it was sending eight police tracking dogs and their handlers aboard two
helicopters, to help in the search for victims trapped under rubble.
Tunisia offered to send medical teams to collect 100
wounded people and evacuate them for treatment, as well as sending in two
military transporters carrying food and medical aid.
From Europe, authorities in the Netherlands, Czech
Republic and Poland offered an array of assistance including doctors, police
and firefighters, together with rescue experts and sniffer dogs.
Iran's President Hassan Rouhani said Tehran stood
"ready to offer medical and medicinal aid and help treat the
injured", and Jordan's King Abdullah II also promised to dispatch a field
hospital.
The United Arab Emirates sent 30 tonnes of medicines,
medical supplies and surgical equipment.
'Stay strong, Lebanon'
The World Health Organization said it was dispatching
trauma and surgical kits from its base in Dubai after what it called a
"shocking event" that comes at a "particularly difficult time in
Lebanon".
"As you've seen, many hospitals are overwhelmed
with casualties and people are still looking for the injured and the dead, so
it's a very sad day," the UN agency's emergencies director Michael Ryan
told an online session.
Close allies and traditional adversaries of Lebanon
alike sent their condolences, with Iran and Saudi Arabia -- long rivals for
influence over the country -- both sending messages of support.
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A member of Qatar's security forces organises boxes to
be loaded into a plane as
the Gulf country sends field hospitals and medical
aid to Lebanon from an airbase
near Doha
|
"Our thoughts and prayers are with the great and
resilient people of Lebanon," Iranian Foreign Minister Mohammad Javad
Zarif tweeted.
"Stay strong, Lebanon."
Saudi Arabia said it was following the situation with
"great concern".
Unusually, neighbouring Israel offered humanitarian
aid -- to a country with which it is still technically at war -- via
international intermediaries.
Lebanon's flag was to be projected onto Tel Aviv's
city hall later Wednesday, in Israel's latest gesture.
United Nations chief Antonio Guterres expressed his
"deepest condolences... following the horrific explosions in Beirut,"
which also injured some UN personnel.
US President Donald Trump, who said it looked like
"a terrible attack", without giving any evidence, said: "Our
prayers go out to all the victims and their families... The United States
stands ready to assist Lebanon."
British Prime Minister Boris Johnson called the
pictures and videos from Beirut "shocking".
And Pope Francis offered prayers for the victims and
their families so that they might "face this extremely tragic and painful
moment and, with the help of the international community, overcome the grave
crisis they are experiencing".



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