Saudi Arabia will ban Lebanese fruits and vegetables entering the kingdom or passing through it because those shipments have been increasingly used to smuggle drugs, the official news agency has reported.
The ban, ordered by the kingdom's Interior Ministry, will begin on Sunday, April 25, according to the Saudi Press Agency.
Lebanon's Foreign Ministry said it was aware of the decision. It said smuggling and shipping drugs was "damaging to the Lebanese economy, to the Lebanese farmers and to Lebanon's reputation". It called on Lebanese customs authorities to increase checks and inspections of shipments leaving the country.
The decision is a blow to Lebanon's economy, in which agricultural exports are a major foreign currency earner for the cash-strapped Lebanese government. Lebanon is already reeling from the worst economic and financial crisis of its modern history. The local currency has lost 85 per cent of its value to the dollar in recent months and businesses have shut down while banks imposed informal controls on transfers and withdrawals.
Arab countries are Lebanon's main export markets for agricultural products, accounting for nearly 80 per cent of more than $264 million of total exports in 2019, where Saudi Arabia had more than 20 per cent of the share, followed by Qatar.