A crushing economic crisis in Lebanon has impelled members of the security forces to take on side hustles to get by, raising concerns about security in the eastern Mediterranean country.
Soldiers in Lebanon have seen their salaries diminish to about one-eighth of their value in dollar terms since the country’s economy began tanking in late 2019.
To make ends meet, 28-year-old soldier Samer said he works three days a week with his uncle at a garage in the northern port city of Tripoli.
Photo: AFP
“Almost all of my army friends have a second job,” he said, standing near an open car hood, his hands dirty with grease and oil.
In regular times, moonlighting while serving in the military can be punishable by imprisonment.
Now, “the army turns a blind eye because if not, everybody would quit,” said Samer, whose name has been changed as he is not allowed to talk to the media.
The devastating economic crisis — which the World Bank says is one of the planet’s worst in modern times — has plunged more than 80 percent of the Lebanese population into poverty.
On average, a soldier used to earn about US$800 a month before the crisis, but the value of the Lebanese currency, the pound, has since crashed and salaries are now worth about US$100.
Working at the garage, Samer said that he earns double what he does as a soldier — but still struggles to survive, with diapers and milk to buy for his young son.
Since June last year, Qatar and the US have announced millions to help prop up security force salaries — particularly for the army, seen as a key pillar of Lebanon’s stability.
“Even with the US$100 extra from the Qataris every 45 days, it’s still not enough,” Samer said. “At the end of the month, I’m penniless.”
About 80,000 Lebanese serve in the army, while almost 25,000 police serve in the Lebanese Internal Security Forces (ISF), official sources showed.
The army declined to respond to a request for comment on the issue of soldiers taking up second jobs.
Ahmad, 29, chose to desert after 10 years of service, preferring instead to work full time as a waiter.
“I realized that staying was hopeless,” he said, also using a pseudonym.
He quit early last year and said that others from his barracks had also left the army.
“I was raised to love the uniform. I still do, but we are suffocating,” he said.
Lebanon’s cash-strapped military struggles to even maintain its own equipment.
After the economic meltdown began, the army cut down on meat in meals for on-duty soldiers, while in 2021 it introduced helicopter joyrides for tourists in a bid to boost its coffers.
Ahmad said that he worried about being arrested for deserting.
“But at least I earn seven times the amount from before — and have enough to eat,” he added.
Dina Arakji from Control Risks consultancy said that morale in the security forces “has decreased as a result of the crisis.”
Unofficially allowing soldiers to work other jobs has jeopardized “the forces’ ability to effectively cover and respond to the country’s domestic security needs,” she said.
Police who serve in the ISF say their financial woes are even tougher.
“Our situation is pitiful,” Elie, a 37-year-old police officer, said at a protest demanding pension increases for armed forces members in March.
The father of three said that his salary was worth about US$50 and that he worked with his father, a farmer, to help feed his family.
“The ISF turns a blind eye to those moonlighting as there are no other solutions,” a security official said.
The official, requesting anonymity as they were not authorized to talk to the media, said that health budgets for the armed forces had also collapsed.
The army provides its own hospital for its forces, but the ISF has no such facilities.
“The worst thing is that if you are injured on the job, you have to pay your own hospital bills,” police officer Elie said.
JITTERS: Nexperia has a 20 percent market share for chips powering simpler features such as window controls, and changing supply chains could take years European carmakers are looking into ways to scratch components made with parts from China, spooked by deepening geopolitical spats playing out through chipmaker Nexperia BV and Beijing’s export controls on rare earths. To protect operations from trade ructions, several automakers are pushing major suppliers to find permanent alternatives to Chinese semiconductors, people familiar with the matter said. The industry is considering broader changes to its supply chain to adapt to shifting geopolitics, Europe’s main suppliers lobby CLEPA head Matthias Zink said. “We had some indications already — questions like: ‘How can you supply me without this dependency on China?’” Zink, who also
At least US$50 million for the freedom of an Emirati sheikh: That is the king’s ransom paid two weeks ago to militants linked to al-Qaeda who are pushing to topple the Malian government and impose Islamic law. Alongside a crippling fuel blockade, the Group for the Support of Islam and Muslims (JNIM) has made kidnapping wealthy foreigners for a ransom a pillar of its strategy of “economic jihad.” Its goal: Oust the junta, which has struggled to contain Mali’s decade-long insurgency since taking power following back-to-back coups in 2020 and 2021, by scaring away investors and paralyzing the west African country’s economy.
BUST FEARS: While a KMT legislator asked if an AI bubble could affect Taiwan, the DGBAS minister said the sector appears on track to continue growing The local property market has cooled down moderately following a series of credit control measures designed to contain speculation, the central bank said yesterday, while remaining tight-lipped about potential rule relaxations. Lawmakers in a meeting of the legislature’s Finance Committee voiced concerns to central bank officials that the credit control measures have adversely affected the government’s tax income and small and medium-sized property developers, with limited positive effects. Housing prices have been climbing since 2016, even when the central bank imposed its first set of control measures in 2020, Chinese Nationalist Party (KMT) Legislator Lo Ting-wei (羅廷瑋) said. “Since the second half of
Taiwan Semiconductor Manufacturing Co (TSMC, 台積電) received about NT$147 billion (US$4.71 billion) in subsidies from the US, Japanese, German and Chinese governments over the past two years for its global expansion. Financial data compiled by the world’s largest contract chipmaker showed the company secured NT$4.77 billion in subsidies from the governments in the third quarter, bringing the total for the first three quarters of the year to about NT$71.9 billion. Along with the NT$75.16 billion in financial aid TSMC received last year, the chipmaker obtained NT$147 billion in subsidies in almost two years, the data showed. The subsidies received by its subsidiaries —