by Mimi Kirk
It’s been a little over a year since the beginning of Beirut’s garbage crisis, which saw piles and piles of trash—indeed, an entire river
of the stuff—flooding the Lebanese capital and its suburbs. When the
government closed the city’s main landfill in July 2015, it had 15
million tons of garbage in it—13 million more than it was meant to. Because the government had not secured a new landfill, trash collection stopped. Mounds of rubbish accumulated in the streets.
The stench and sight of the trash spurred a protest movement, aptly
dubbed You Stink. Hassan Chamoun, the movement’s photographer and
videographer, tells CityLab that he and his fellow activists would
collect garbage around the city—from, say, the teeming Beirut River—and
pass it to NGOs to dispose of. “We were saying to the government that we
don’t need you, we can take care of things ourselves,” he says.
The crisis, while not resolved, has calmed since the spring of 2016,
when the government started using temporary landfills. At the same time,
there’s been a shift among Beirut’s residents in their approach to
garbage. Some who didn’t give their trash a second thought before the
crisis are now recycling and even spearheading sorting and disposal
initiatives. “Even I began to separate my garbage for recycling after
the crisis started,” says Chamoun.