by Sunniva Rose — thenational.ae — Former cycling superstar Lance Armstrong toured Beirut on Sunday with over thirty amateur cyclists to raise funds for local NGOs working to assist victims of the August 4 blast. The ruined port remains an arresting sight, with buildings blown to pieces in the explosion that killed nearly 200 people and left 30,000 more homeless, leaving piles of rubble still being cleared by expert teams “I’ve never seen anything like that,” said Mr Armstrong, as he prepared to lead the peloton from the port to the offices of the Lebanese Red Cross, and then to Lebanese NGOs Heartbeat, Beit El Baraka, and Offre Joie. “The fact that only 200 people lost their lives, that’s a miracle,” he added.
Beirut is still reeling from the effects of the explosion of 2,750 tonnes of ammonium nitrate in its port. An investigation is ongoing, but in protests and on social media, the Lebanese accuse their leaders of being responsible for the unsafe storage of the chemical for seven years. “Disaster-stricken Lebanon” was trending on Twitter on Sunday. Mr Armstrong arrived in Beirut on Friday for a four-day visit, his first to the country, and visited the blast site the next day. Mr Armstrong told The National that his friend, American-Lebanese real estate investor Thomas Barrack, convinced him to visit Lebanon. “He asked me to come, I said absolutely,” said Mr Armstrong, who is scheduled to fly to Dubai on Monday for a four-day work trip. “Tom and I are on a longer trip in this part of the world and it just came together. Originally, we weren’t coming to Lebanon.” Lebanese Red Cross volunteer Oudey Hamadeh, 26, said he hoped Mr Armstrong’s visit would encourage donations. “At the start, there were a lot of funds and we hope that the funds will come back,” he said. “It’s been two months since the explosion and maybe people have lost interest in helping the Lebanese Red Cross.”