Beirut explosion: Fleeing death in war-torn Syria, a refugee family dies in blast
Ahmed Staifi’s wife fled the relentless bombing in neighboring Syria only to die in the biggest explosion ever to hit Beirut.
His family escaped the war raging across the border in Syria six years ago, looking for refuge in Lebanon where he was already living and working as a laborer.
“My wife had called me and said Ahmed, ‘I’m fleeing the war and coming to you.’ Death followed her here,” the Syrian father of four said.
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“My wife called me and said Ahmed, ‘I’m fleeing the war and coming to you’ in Lebanon, but death followed her here,” the #Syrian father of four tells his ordeal of losing his wife and two of his four daughters in the #Beirut explosion.https://t.co/QdI5mbelKH pic.twitter.com/oq92lr0eFq
— Al Arabiya English (@AlArabiya_Eng) August 11, 2020
When Staifi rushed home after the warehouse explosion that rocked Beirut last week, he heard his daughter calling out from beneath the rubble of their apartment.
“I came to see my family, and I found this. One of my daughters was yelling ‘Dad, Dad I don’t want to die,’” he recalled.
She survived, as did another child who remains in intensive care.
Watch: The closest footage of the devastating blasts that rocked #Beirut a day earlier has emerged, according to live video shot by two Lebanese citizens living in an apartment opposite the port where the explosions erupted.#Lebanonhttps://t.co/9zqOn4zRCR pic.twitter.com/bzMv3Z9XzR
— Al Arabiya English (@AlArabiya_Eng) August 5, 2020
But his wife Khaldiya and his youngest and oldest daughters - Jude and Latifa, aged 13 and 24 - were killed as a mushroom cloud rose above the Lebanese capital from the blast at Beirut port.
It reduced the three-story building where Staifi’s family lived into slabs of concrete and twisted metal.
The explosion, which killed more than 160 people and injured 6,000 more, demolished entire neighborhoods of Lebanon’s capital in an instant, including Karantina, where the Staifi family had enjoyed a mostly quiet life.
More than a million refugees from the Syrian war have poured into Lebanon since 2011, when the conflict there erupted. Many, scraping by on daily labor and living in camps, have languished in poverty.
At least 43 Syrians were reportedly killed in the explosion at Beirut port.
The blast compounded months of economic collapse in Lebanon which had crashed the local currency and left many Lebanese in dire financial straits. It also fueled public outrage that led to the collapse of the government.
Officials have said a huge stockpile of highly explosive material was stored in unsafe conditions at the port for years.
In a speech declaring his government’s resignation on Monday, Prime Minister Hassan Diab blamed endemic corruption.
But the last thing on Staifi’s mind is the investigation of the blast right now.
“What can I do? My family is gone,” he said. “I have nothing.”
Now, he said, he does not call to check up on his relatives in his city of Idlib in northwest Syria, ravaged by years of war. “Now, they’re checking up on me instead.”
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