The decision by agriculture minister on Wednesday to ban the entry to Lebanon until next February of trucks loaded with Syrian fruits and vegetables has prompted conflicting reactions from both Lebanon and Syria. The Syrian minister of economy, Human Jazairi, described the decision by his Lebanese counterpart Akram Shehayeb as “sudden and untimely aimed to harm the Syrian harvest and the Lebanese traders.” Jazairi reminded Lebanon of the international trade exchange provisions that, he stressed, are continually and traditionally associated with a timeline prior to the actual implementation, in order to guarantee the commercial parties on both sides and avoid complications related to export, import and payment procedures. Jazairi also drew attention to damages incurred on Lebanese merchants and trade circles as a result of the inopportune and swift decision by their government. Such decision in its present form, the Syrian minister warned, entails unjustified financial burdens on both sides and has negative repercussions on the interests of two old neighboring countries. Jazairi recalled that early this year, Syria has received a delegation of Lebanese exporters and famers to discuss difficulties in the marketing of Lebanese bananas, and that the Syrian government has exempted them from customs duties as an encouraging and supportive gesture. On the other hand, while the President of the Bekaa farmers, Ibrahim Tarshishi, praised the “positive and correct” decision by Shehayeb, while the president of the Lebanese Farmers Association, Antoine Howayek, said the double-edged ban decision negatively impacts the local farmers, for it benefits some products and harms others. Similarly, the head of the National Gathering for Agricultural Committees in Lebanon, Jihad Balouk, criticized Chehayeb’s unilateral measure describing it as flawed in form and content. (As Safir, An Nahar, Al Akhbar, Al Diyar, June 10, 2016)