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The Documentary Podcast

What the sediment revealed in Lebanon

The Documentary Podcast

BBC

Documentary, Society & Culture

4.32.7K Ratings

🗓️ 16 July 2020

⏱️ 26 minutes

🧾️ Download transcript

Summary

The discovery of a mysterious delivery of defective, sediment-heavy fuel intended to generate electricity in Lebanon has sparked a huge scandal in the country. More than two dozen people, including senior officials, have been charged with various alleged crimes including bribery, fraud, money-laundering and forging documents. Lebanon has already been in uproar since last autumn, with hundreds of thousands of people involved in street protests demanding the overthrow of the entire political elite – and now the country’s suffering its worst economic crisis in decades. The national currency has collapsed and more than a third of the workforce is unemployed. Electricity shortages – long a problem in Lebanon - have become still more acute, with whole towns plunged into darkness for long periods – and the row over the suspect oil delivery has exacerbated the problem. Now the investigation into the tainted fuel has raised questions about the original deal to import heavy fuel oil – and Lebanese hope it will eventually help explain why they’ve suffered black-outs for so long. Did officials try to cover up the presence of sediment in the shipment? How did the original much-criticised 2005 fuel contract come about? And what do the revelations tell us about the shadowy world of oil trading that the world relies on? Reporters Tim Whewell and Mohamad Chreyteh investigate.

(Image: Zouk power station, Lebanon – where the tainted fuel shipment was first discovered. Credit: Joseph Eid/AFP via Getty Images)

Transcript

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0:00.0

Hello, I'm Tim Huell, and this is assignment on the BBC World Service, starting this week with the sound of a pump moving something dark and

0:16.2

gloopy, probably quite evil-smelling that helps make the world go round.

0:23.0

It's thick, nasty stuff, you know, if you were to dip your hands into it, you would take a bit of work to clean off.

0:30.0

Heavy fuel oil, it enables ships to move, it's burned in power stations, very old-fashioned

0:36.6

ones, to generate electricity, but only if the chemistry is right.

0:41.8

We have like 13 characteristic we always have to look at,

0:45.3

starting from the water content,

0:47.1

to the sediment, to the viscosity,

0:49.2

to the sodium and vanadium ratio.

0:52.0

So it's viscous, dirty, almost the bottom of the barrel, but this is the

0:58.4

story of what happened when the oil got too dirty. We found out that there is a big discrepancy which is sediment.

1:05.5

Sediment in a small overcrowded mountainous country at the far end of the

1:11.2

Mediterranean Sea a state now in free fall.

1:15.0

The sediment in an oil delivery has sparked yet more rage

1:19.0

and led to indictments against senior officials.

1:30.0

What did the sediment reveal in Lebanon? The fake fuel scandal is a perfect example of the corruption in this government.

1:33.3

It's not a tainted fuel issue, huh?

1:38.2

The tainted fuel issue is just the tip of the iceberg.

1:40.8

Behind that there is a whole issue of corruption and state

1:44.8

captured that needs to be dealt with. There are big questions that need answers.

1:49.4

Lebanon's been almost ungovernable since October.

1:54.4

That's when hundreds of thousands of its 7 million citizens

...

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