Beirut's largest green space off-limits to Lebanese
Local municipality says Horsh Beirut is not properly equipped to receive crowds of visitors
Beirut
WITH 30 hectares of pine forest, it could be Beirut's answer to New York's Central Park, but for 20 years the capital's largest green space has been de facto off-limits to Lebanese.
It's a galling situation for residents of the city's concrete jungle, where activists have spent years campaigning for Horsh Beirut to be reopened to the public. They have faced reluctance from the local municipality, which says the park that accounts for two-thirds of Beirut's green space is not properly equipped to receive crowds of visitors.
TRENDING NOW
‘I felt like dying’: Thai Singha beer scion speaks up after disclosure of alleged sexual abuse
In a world of long-drawn crises, ‘wait and see’ may be a decreasingly tenable stance
SpaceX’s US$1.75 trillion IPO: How retail investors, including those in Singapore, can buy shares
The returnees: Inside China’s AI talent reversal