Lebanon buried more of its dead on Wednesday from the huge explosion at Beirut port that disfigured the city, toppled the government and deepened a painful economic crisis.
Top foreign diplomats kept streaming into traumatised Lebanon to show solidarity over its worst peacetime disaster and push for reforms to curb the corruption blamed for causing it.
Family members of Imad Zahr Al Din, a worker at the port of Beirut who was killed in the explosion, mourn during his funeral near Tyre. AFP
Survivors and volunteers were still sweeping rubble-strewn streets a week after a large depot of industrial chemicals blew up in an explosion so powerful it was dubbed "Beirutshima" on social media.
The official death toll from the colossal blast that evoked memories of the Hiroshima atom bomb blast rose to 171, while 6,500 were injured and 300,000 left temporarily homeless.
Beirut's main fire station, located a stone's throw from the devastated port, held an emotional funeral for one of the 10 comrades it lost in the conflagration.
"May God be with you, our hero," firefighters cried as they saw off the coffin of their lost friend Jo Noun during their fourth such ceremony since the Aug.4 disaster.
An injured demonstrator is taken by an ambulance after clashes with police in Beirut. AP
Ten firefighters are confirmed to have died, and six more are still among the missing, including three members of the same family.
Their relatives have been waiting, in their mountain village of Qartaba, for their return.
"In one piece or several, we want our sons back," Rita Hitti said. The three missing young men are her son, nephew and son-in-law.
Direct aid
Lebanese and foreign emergency response teams were still searching the dusty "ground zero" where the explosion pulverised buildings and left a water-logged 43-metre-deep crater where a quay and warehouses once stood.
The human error that sparked the kind of wholesale devastation usually associated with a major earthquake has sparked public rage, matched only by the speed at which officials are seen to be passing the buck.
Enquiries made by AFP, and the public comments of Lebanon's top officials, reveal that the hazard posed by the ammonium nitrate depot had been known for some time at every echelon of the state before the deadly catastrophe.
Around 100 of the wounded were recently still listed in critical condition and it was feared the death toll could yet rise as Beirut's hospitals, only half of which are operational, kept treating the casualties.
Among those killed was a diplomat from Germany, whose top diplomat Heiko Maas arrived in Lebanon on Wednesday for a short visit of support.
In a social media message before flying out he stressed the need for "profound economic reform," echoing calls made by French President Emmanuel Macron last week during a high-profile visit to disaster-stricken Beirut.
When he Maas got off the plane, he announced a one million euro donation directly to the Lebanese Red Cross, in line with a pledge that emergency aid should bypass a government that has lost the trust of the people.
Jockeying
Angry protesters demonstrated for a third night running on Tuesday to demand the wholesale ouster of a ruling political elite they see as directly responsible for the port tragedy.
Mock gallows and nooses have become the symbols of the new wave of protests, which have rekindled a revolutionary street movement that had lost steam in recent months amid economic hardship and the coronavirus pandemic.
Under intense domestic and foreign pressure, Prime Minister Hassan Diab announced his government's resignation on Monday. Many citizens bitterly laughed off his efforts to cast himself as a champion of the fight against corruption.
Some saw it as a victory and a sign that continued pressure could force change in a country, which has been ruled by the same cartel of former warlords and their relatives since the 1975-1990 civil war.
Others feared that the resignation of Diab's government could herald the return of old faces, such as former prime minister Saad Hariri.
According to the Al Akhbar daily newspaper, Nawaf Salam, a former judge at the International Court of Justice, is the favoured successor of some of Lebanon's top foreign partners, including France.
However Salam is not an acceptable choice for the Muslim Shiite movement Hizbollah, which wields most power in Lebanon, the paper said.
A return of Saad Hariri, who resigned under pressure from the street late last year, would be a red rag to a bull for the rejuvenated protest camp.
Parliament was due to convene on Thursday to approve the state of emergency, which would give security forces heightened powers to curb the street demonstrations.
Agence France-Presse