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Lebanon's summer tourism season registered solid numbers despite political instability and regional tensions, but industry ...
U.S. officials relayed to Lebanese leaders the outcome of the discussions held by Barrack and Ortagus with Israeli officials.
While many of its residents continue to struggle to put food on the table during a crippling economic crisis, Beirut has been ranked the most expensive city in the Middle East and among the costliest ...
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Khaleej Times on MSNWater shortages plague Beirut as low rainfall compounds woes
People are buying water by the truckload in Beirut as the state supply faces its worst shortages in years, with the leaky public sector struggling after record-low rainfall and local wells running dry ...
Five years after the massive Beirut port explosion that killed more than 220 people and injured thousands, victims' families ...
By Jamie Bullen If you're just joining us this morning we are providing live coverage on the escalating violence across the Middle East as Israel launched attacks in Beirut and southern Lebanon.
A survey on the quality of living in 221 cities around the world by global consultants Mercer Human Resource Consulting ranked Beirut as the 172nd most desirable city for overall living standards and ...
The annual survey on the quality of living in 221 cities around the world by global consultants Mercer Human Resource Consulting ranked Beirut as the 170th most desirable city for overall living ...
Israel bombed Beirut early on Thursday, killing at least six people, after its forces suffered their deadliest day on the Lebanese front in a year of clashes with Iran-backed Hezbollah.
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The National on MSNBeauty and beast versus 'animalistic' media: Barrack and Ortagus in awkward Beirut briefing
US envoy Tom Barrack berated the Lebanese media in a widely televised press briefing on Tuesday. He scolded journalists for being “chaotic” and warned that he and deputy Middle East envoy Morgan ...
Syrian refugees beg for a living on Beirut streets A Unicef study found that more than 1,500 children live or work on Lebanon's streets, nearly three quarters of them Syrians.
Beirut will live foreverThe global conflict is now against all secular thought and the separation of religion and state, which Europeans struggled to establish. And the theological tendency in the ...
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