Beirut’s famous cafes drained by dollar crisis, stifled by pandemic

Beirut’s famous cafes drained by dollar crisis, stifled by pandemic

BEIRUT: Beirut's famous sidewalk cafes are facing an uncertain future amid the coronavirus pandemic and dollar exchange rate instability, with employees and owners warning that “the price of a cup of coffee cannot keep pace with the exchange rate.”The recent lockdown, which lasted for two months and 22 days, meant further problems for the capital's cafes, the place of choice for many Lebanese to relax, wind down and socialize.Many have closed amid the country's economic turmoil, while several were destroyed in the port explosion last year, and have since been left abandoned.Lebanon's health measures to stop the spread of coronavirus mean that people are banned from sitting with each other to smoke, sip coffee, chat about affairs or discuss the country's future. Ali Farhat, 35, an investor in a sidewalk cafe in the Azaria building in downtown Beirut, remembers the “good old times in the area before the protests and the accompanying riots started in late 2019 and the days before the collapse of the Lebanese pound and coronavirus.”He added: “The area was bustling. The cafe was a place for entertainment, hanging out with people, winding down for half an hour during workdays and having a snack. Everyone back then