Posts Tagged ‘beach’
Best Cheap (And Free) Beaches In Lebanon? How clean and safe?
Everybody loves a day well spent at the beach, and the good news is you don’t really need to break the bank to enjoy your time!
Here are our top five picks for free or cheap beaches from all around Lebanon.
1. Tyre (Sour) Coast
This is, without a doubt, the most perfect beach in Lebanon.
The coast is gorgeous and sandy, the water is perfect and clean, and the administration is extremely friendly and organized.
Though it may be a little bit far from Beirut, it is well worth the drive.
Head down there on a sunny morning to be met with golden sand and colorful umbrellas, the best part? There is no entrance fee, it’s free! You just pay for what you order drinks/food wise.
Tyre Public Beach
On the coast of Sour
2. Pierre & Friends
This notorious Batroun spot has become a favorite for most Lebanese people!
You can enjoy the music and a gorgeous bar on the rocky shore – all for free entrance.
Don’t forget to eat at the restaurant; time it right and you get to enjoy your deliciously fresh seafood with a killer view of the beach at sunset.
Pierre & Friends
Seaside Road
Batroun
Mob.: +9613352930
3. Ô-Glacée
This cool sailor’s school and beach bar is located in Batroun, and managed by the Lebanese Yacht Club.
You get the benefits of a clean pebble and sand coast, as well as the chance to give your wallet a rest. It is free entrance, just pay as you order!
Be sure to try their delicious food, including their fresh caught fish and Lebanese mezza.
Ô-Glacée
Batroun Shore
Batroun
Tel.: +9616741841
4. Benny Beach
Located in Chekka, in the North of Lebanon, this beach is somewhat of a hidden gem. The entrance fees are extremely low (10,000 LL for adults; 5,000 for children,) and the coast is sandy and gorgeous.
It is a terrific place to spend some low-key beach time with your friends and family.
5. White Beach
As the name suggests, White Beach has a gorgeous white sandy coast. Located in Batroun, this local treasure is clean, relaxed, and doesn’t overcrowd.
The entrance fee is low (around 10,000 L.L) and there is a restaurant so you can enjoy a lunch during your day at the beach.
White Beach
Thoum, Batroun
Tel.: +9616742404
Tel.: +9616742505
Mob.: +9613732404
Time it right and you get to enjoy your deliciously fresh seafood with a killer view of the beach at sunset.
Four Palestinian kids killed while playing football on beach: Israeli warships open fire
Posted by: adonis49 on: July 20, 2014

The fishermen who are based there strenuously deny that any arms, including rocket launchers have been based there. Mohammed Fares, a 33-year-old waiter at al-Deira Hotel, watched what happened from the terrace. “We often see boys playing on the beach, this is quite common. Suddenly there was an explosion and I could see a group of them fall. Some people working in cafes on the beach came out to help,” he said.
“As they trying to look after the kids there was another explosion, it must have been aimed at them. “Three of the kids started running towards us and we dragged them up on to the terrace where the journalists and others gave them medical help. Of course the ones left on the beach were much more badly hurt and they died. It is very, very sad.”
The beach attack took place on a violent day as Benjamin Netanyahu’s government ratcheted up the offensive. It had threatened in retaliation for the refusal of Hamas to agree to a ceasefire agreement proposed by Egypt.
Around 30 houses were targeted including those of senior Hamas leaders Mahmoud Zahar, Jamila Shanti, Fathi Hamas and Ismail Ashkar. Mr Zahar was a key figure in Hamas’ violent takeover of Gaza from Fatah in 2007: the other three were members of the Palestinian parliament elected in 2006.
The Israeli military also ordered more than 100,000 residents of the northern town of Beit Lahiya and the Zeitoun and Shijaiyah neighborhoods of Gaza City, all near the border with Israel, to evacuate their homes by 8am, the calls to evacuate came in the form of automated phone calls, text messages and leaflets dropped from planes. Palestinian children run to collect leaflets dropped by Israeli Defense Forces over the Shujaiyya neighbourhood in east Gaza City.
Later, Israel’s military said it would hold a five-hour ceasefire for “humanitarian” reasons on Thursday. It also said it was investigating the deaths of the four children, saying the “target of this strike was Hamas terrorist operatives” and the “reported civilian causalities from this strike are a tragic outcome”.
Although many fled their homes, adding to the thousands who had become internal refugees, many others refused to move. At Zeitun, Ahmed Abdullah Rahimi declared that his extended family of 18 would await “bombs, or soldiers, or whatever they have got planned for us”.
Rahimi said: “This is our land, if they burn down our home, we will build again. Some people had left this area in the past, but they came back when the Israelis did not invade. Maybe they will invade this time, hey may kill people around here, but we are not afraid.”
Late in the afternoon, as the sun was setting, 32-year-old Dia Bakr was on the beach where four of his younger cousins had died. “We are a large family and we spend a lot of time together. I taught some of them football on this beach, we used to even have picnics here when there was peace. No one thought they would be in any danger here, in daytime, at a place where they had played all their lives.
There are so many hotels here. People staying here can see what’s going on. We thought they would be safe because they were just children of fishermen. We thought they were safe because they were children. Surely whoever did the firing could see that?”