Postcard from... Beirut
Friday 07 September 2012
In a country struggling to avoid the spillover from a civil war next door, where infrastructure is allowed to crumble, where corruption is rampant and where roads blocked by burning tyres are a regular sight, many have questioned the timing of a ban on smoking indoors.
It is a question of priorities; deal with the big things first before you come after us, they say. Of course, most of those people are smokers – but they have their supporters.
Café and bar owners complain that it will hurt their businesses, and they are probably right. Libertarians say it is an intrusion.
Walking through the bar-filled Gemmayzeh area of Beirut on the first night of the ban, I felt a flicker of sympathy for the hundreds of nicotine addicts on to the pavements. Their faces resembled those of scared animals, newly introduced into the wild after years in captivity.
But the sheer numbers in their herd should have given them cause for concern.
Lebanon is commonly referred to as a "smoker's paradise". And for good reason. More than 45 per cent of men and 30 per cent of women are estimated to be regular smokers, according to the World Health Organisation – the highest proportion in the Middle East. One would hope that if the ban goes any way to reducing the number of smokers in Lebanon, the questions of liberty and priority will fade away.
For some, the potential for a healthier country is not the only benefit.
As one regular club patron said: "I enter the club smelling like shampoo, I leave the club smelling like shampoo. Smoking ban, you're like a dream come true."
-
That's some guestlist! Stunning images show huge dynastic wedding between Ultra-Orthodox Jewish families which attracted 25,000 guests
-
'Sickening, deluded and unforgivable': Horrific attack brings terror to London’s streets
-
National archives: Edward VIII’s phone calls - and how MI5 bugged them
-
World news in pictures
-
Ingrid Loyau-Kennett, the mother-of-two hailed as a hero for confronting Woolwich attackers, thought: 'better me than a child'
- 1 'Sickening, deluded and unforgivable': Horrific attack brings terror to London’s streets
- 2 Mothers' diets may harm IQs in two-thirds of babies
- 3 Far-right French historian, 78-year-old Dominique Venner, commits suicide in Notre Dame in protest against gay marriage
- 4 Ingrid Loyau-Kennett, the mother-of-two hailed as a hero for confronting Woolwich attackers, thought: 'better me than a child'
- 5 Woolwich attack: The EDL will seek to exploit this evil crime for their own evil ends
Get your summer started with British Military Fitness
BMF is the UK’s biggest and best loved outdoor fitness classes
Visit York
Find out what The Independent's resident travel expert has to say about one of the most beautiful small cities in the world
Enter the latest Independent competitions
Win anything from gadgets to five-star holidays on our competitions and offers page.
Business videos from commercial thought leaders
Watch the best in the business world give their insights into the world of business.
Independent Dating
Day In a Page
Edward VIII’s phone calls - and how MI5 bugged them
Hollywood's random acts of red-carpet kindness
Not secure any more: G4S boss heads for exit at last
How to say ‘I’m a sellout’






Comments