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Time hardly heals wounds of families of Beirut port blasts' victims

XINHUA

發布於 2022年08月04日16:03 • eblt

Photo taken on July 31, 2022 shows the Beirut port grain silos after its northern part collapsed in a fire in Beirut, Lebanon. (Xinhua/Bilal Jawich)

Two years have passed since the Beirut port blasts, but the pain still lingers among the families of the victims as the investigations continue.

BEIRUT, Aug. 4 (Xinhua) -- Two years have passed since Sahar Fares, a Lebanese paramedic, was killed by the huge explosions at the Beirut port, but her fiancé, Gilbert Karaan, still cannot believe that he has forever lost the love of his life.

"I try to survive this tragedy by telling myself that Sahar has been on travels and that I will see her again soon," Karaan told Xinhua on the second anniversary of the blasts that occurred on Aug. 4, 2020, killing at least 200 people and wounding more than 6,000 others.

"I cannot accept that she has died," the 32-year-old man said, with tears in his eyes.

Fares, then a 27-year-old paramedic, was rushing to the port for rescue after the first explosion took place, causing huge flames that engulfed a warehouse. Then the second explosion went off, killing the firefighters and medical workers at the site.

Photo taken on Aug. 13, 2020 shows a man looking at photos at his damaged home in Beirut, Lebanon after the huge explosions. (Xinhua/Bilal Jawich)

Karaan said that, for the past two years, he has tried everything but failed to get over with the death of his beloved woman who "still means the world to him."

"I go out and meet with people, but it only makes me feel worse because she is not there with me," he said. "It becomes even worse when I see a happy couple and remember all our beautiful moments together."

For Samia Doughan, the time seems to have stopped ever since she lost her husband, also the father of their twin daughters, in the explosion.

"They say that the pain of losing a loved one gets easier with time but this is definitely not my case or that of my daughters. We feel worse about this tragedy, especially when Aug. 4 gets closer," said Doughan, whose husband worked at the Beirut Container Terminal Consortium back then.

Photo taken on July 28, 2022 shows the grain silos damaged in the 2020 Beirut Port explosion in Beirut, Lebanon. (Xinhua/Bilal Jawich)

She cannot forget how she felt at the time when she was anxiously looking for her husband at the port while bodies were recovered from the rubble and her daughters' phone calls kept coming in.

"These moments have become imprinted in my mind, and I just can't get over with them," Doughan told Xinhua in a shaky voice.

"It kills me when my daughters later said they envy me for having lived with both my father and mother until I got married," she said.

Similarly, life has never been easy for William Noun, 29, who lost his brother, a firefighter, in the Beirut explosions.

"Although I still wake up every morning, without my brother by my side, it will never be the same again for the rest of my life," Noun told Xinhua, adding that the sorrow still lingers among his family.

People participate in a memorial event held at the Beirut Fire Brigade's headquarters in Beirut, Lebanon, on Aug. 3, 2022. (Xinhua/Liu Zongya)

Driven by his painful memory of losing his brother, Noun, along with the families of victims, has been supporting the investigations into the blasts in the hope to bring justice for his brother and all other victims.

"My family lives for this cause now," he said.

Youssef Lahoud, the lawyer who represents around 1,400 victims of the explosions, told Xinhua that the judicial system is determined to investigate the explosions and reach the complete truth, but more time is needed to achieve this goal.

In an apparent message to the victims' families, Lebanese President Michel Aoun on Thursday reiterated his commitment to achieving justice for the victims of the port explosions.

"I assure the families of the victims that I am committed to achieving justice by revealing the complete truth through an impartial judicial process away from any fraud, discretion or injustice, to hold accountable all those who are involved, because no one is above the law," Aoun said on the second anniversary of the tragic explosions.

A woman pays tribute to a monument during a memorial event held at the Beirut Fire Brigade's headquarters in Beirut, Lebanon, on Aug. 3, 2022. (Xinhua/Liu Zongya)■

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