British Ambassador visits UK funded projects in Saida
The British Ambassador to Lebanon, Hamish Cowell, inaugurated the newly rebuilt Fish Market in Saida.
This transformative project aims to revitalise Saida’s fishing sector by modernising the market and providing new facilities and equipment for local fishermen. It is supporting more than 450 local fishermen, as well as their families and hundreds of beneficiaries across local communities in and around Saida.
The project was funded by the United Kingdom under the Lebanon Host Communities Support Programme (LHSP), in partnership with the United Nations Development Programme (UNDP), the Ministry of Social Affairs, the Ministry of Public Works and Transport and the Saida Municipality.
Also present were UNDP’s Resident Representative in Lebanon, Melanie Hauenstein, Dr Hector Hajjar, Minister of Social Affairs, Mr Mohamad Nahle, representing the Minister of Public Works and Transport, Mr Mohamad Seoudi, Dr Abdelrahman El-Bizri MP, Mrs Bahiya Hariri, Mayor of Saida Municipality and Mr Nazih Sinbol, Head of Saida Fishermen Syndicate. He also met members of the local fishing community and underlined the UK’s continued support to people across Lebanon.
Ambassador Cowell met later with Dr Abdel Rahman El Bizri MP and Ousama Saad MP to discuss the challenges facing Saida and the opportunities for its development.
On the revived Saida corniche, Ambassador Cowell also visited a UK funded project of solar-powered lighting along 7Km of the city’s coast and heard how this has helped make the area safer and more accessible to local residents, small vendors, and tourists.
At the end of his visit, Ambassador Cowell said:
Saida is a city steeped in Phoenician history with wonderful archaeological and heritage sites.
I am proud to see the transformational impact that UK-funded projects in Saida are having on Lebanese livelihoods.
The UK is supporting Lebanon in its current challenging circumstances and will continue to encourage the reforms and changes needed to ensure a better future for the Lebanese people.