Mohammad sat in the smaller grocery store where he worked and flipped through the pages of a notebook, filled with a long list of customers indebted to the shop, Arise News reports.
“More and more people are struggling with
money and asking us to let them pay later,” the 30-year-old Syrian refugee from
Deraa told Al Jazeera, as a growing fuel crunch has led food prices to
skyrocket.
“We have to try to be patient with them.
Things have become much worse with the fuel crisis over the summer.”
According to the report, the small shop is located in the heart of Beirut’s semi-industrial Karantina neighbourhood, a stone’s throw away from the destroyed port, adding that many of the shelves at the shop were packed, but that is because people are simply focusing on household necessities, Mohammad said.