by AFP — The World Bank said Friday it was canceling a loan to fund a dam in Lebanon that environmentalists claimed could destroy a valley rich in biodiversity. The Bisri Dam was partially suspended in June after the Washington-based development lender said it raised concerns about the project’s implementation, and given the government of Lebanon until September 4 to finalize key agreements related to operations and maintenance as well as the environment. In a statement, the World Bank said it had notified the government that it was withdrawing its financing “due to non-completion of the tasks that are preconditions to the commencement of construction.” “The canceled portion of the loan is $244 million and the cancelation is effective immediately,” the bank said.
Located in a valley 30 kilometres (20 miles) south of the capital, the dam aims to supply drinking water as well as irrigation for 1.6 million residents. Environmentalists and some farmers had disputed assurances from the government and the World Bank that the dam, to be built on a seismic fault line, does not increase the risk of earthquakes. Roland Nassour, an activist who has campaigned against the project, said he was delighted the loan had been cancelled. “Today one of the corruption deals in the country has collapsed,” said Nassour, the coordinator of the Save Bisri initiative, adding that popular anger had made the project a “burden” for the global lender.
‘Glimmer of hope’
Eddy Akl, the owner of land expropriated by the state to build the dam, said the loan’s withdrawal was a step in the right direction. “The decision is of course positive. But our other battle will be for the state to hand us back our land,” he said. “It’s a glimmer of hope, but no one knows what the state has in store for us next.” On social media, users shared the image of a stork flying across a valley in blossom, carrying a banner that read: “We saved the Bisri valley.” “Finally some good news in 2020,” one wrote.
Gebran Bassil, the head of the president’s Free Patriotic Movement political party and a backer of the project, claimed the Lebanese public would ask for a dam again soon. “There will come a day when the Lebanese state, and with it the people of Beirut, Jezzine, Saida, Chouf, Baabda and Aley will ask for the Bisri dam to be funded,” he wrote on Twitter. “The need for water will become apparent… and nothing will do except to secure a new loan to return to the same dam.”