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There are no official and reliable statistics in Lebanon to allow for such an objective determination. While GDP numbers are widely available [3] - US$13,200 (2009 est.) -, there is no reliable real estate price index. There is also no current survey of quality of housing in Lebanon, which could be used to determine intrinsic values for houses.
Prostitution in Lebanon is nominally legal and regulated. [1] However, no licences have been issued since 1975. [1] [2] In modern Lebanon, prostitution takes place semi-officially via 'super night clubs', and illegally on the streets, in bars, hotels and brothels. [2] UNAIDS estimate there to be 4,220 prostitutes in the country. [3]
Early migration of Lebanese people to the Emirates began during Lebanese Civil War (1975-1990) which resulted in a high influx of Lebanese moving their businesses to Dubai, Sharjah and Abu Dhabi and continued to do so during the 1990s and the further ongoing civil unrest in Lebanon due to the 2011 Syrian Civil War.
Most of Lebanon's rainfall is in the four months of winter, but over the last 45 years, the Ministry of Environment (Lebanon) estimates that rainfall has decreased overall between 5 and 20 percent. [10] The coastal strip of Lebanon gets approximately 2,000 mm of rain per year, while the Beqaa Valley to the east gets only one-tenth as much. [11]
On 29 November 1947, Lebanon was among 13 states that rejected the United Nations Partition Plan for Palestine which later established the Jewish state known as Israel in May 1948 though Lebanon does not recognize as such. The country has been subjected to 44 UN resolutions.
Saint Joseph Hospital - Dora, Lebanon; St Therese Hospital - Hadath; Saydet Zgharta Hospital - Zgharta; Tannourine Governmental Hospital - Tannourine, Batroun; Trad Hospital - Beirut; Tal Chiha Hospital - Zahle, Beqaa; Zahraa University Hospital - Beirut