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Wednesday April 24, 2024

Protests flare up again as Lebanon’s govt frays

By AFP
October 21, 2019

Beirut: Tens of thousands of Lebanese took to the streets for a fourth day Sunday to protest political stasis and corruption, as the government was rocked by the resignation of a coalition partner. Demonstrations began spontaneously on Thursday in response to a proposed tax on calls via WhatsApp and other messaging services.

While the government quickly dropped the plans, the protests morphed into demands for a sweeping overhaul of Lebanon´s political system, with grievances ranging from austerity measures to poor infrastructure. More than a quarter of Lebanon´s population lives below the poverty line, according to the World Bank, while the country´s political class has remained relatively unchanged since the end of a devastating 15-year civil war in 1990. Sunday saw street rallies swell again, with thousands streaming into central Beirut and other locations throughout the country, many chanting “revolution” or “the people demand the fall of the regime” — a common refrain of demonstrations in other parts of the Arab world. “I am demonstrating here to bring down the president´s men and his corrupt government,” Sanaa Mallah, 40, said in downtown Beirut.

“I have a lot of hope in this movement. Beleaguered Prime Minister Saad Hariri set a Monday night deadline for coalition partners to back reforms, but the four ministers of the Maronite Christian Lebanese Forces party resigned Saturday evening. Lebanon ranked 138 out of 180 in Transparency International´s 2018 corruption index, while citizens suffer chronic electricity and water shortages.

Lebanon´s political system was set up to balance power between the country´s religious sects, including Christians, Sunni Muslims, Shiite Muslims and Druze. What some have dubbed the “WhatsApp revolution” has support from wide swathes of Lebanese society. The protests have been mostly good-natured, with people singing or launching into traditional dabke dances, while others play cards and smoke shisha. In Tripoli, Lebanon´s traditionally conservative second city, the protests at points looked like a music festival Saturday evening, with a DJ pumping out dance music from loudspeakers.

But while the demonstrators are largely united on what they oppose — with many condemning the entire political class as thieves and criminals — they so far lack a clear set of demands.

Speaking on Friday, Hariri did not say what would happen if the government did not back key reforms by Monday night, with the 72-hour deadline widely mocked among protestors and on social media.

Scuppering Hariri´s unity call, Lebanese Forces head Samir Geagea, announced late Saturday that the party´s four ministers were quitting the government.

“We are now convinced that the government is unable to take the necessary steps to save the situation,” Geagea said.