Lebanon pupils skip school for 3rd day to demand change

Youth unemployment running at over 30 percent, school students have joined en masse demanding a better country so they don't have to emigrate

By AFP
November 08, 2019
Thousands of high school students across Lebanon skipped classes Friday for a third day in a row.— Photo: AFP

BEIRUT: Thousands of high school students across Lebanon skipped classes Friday for a third day in a row to carry on the flame of the country's anti-graft movement.

Lebanon has since October 17 been gripped by massive protests demanding a complete revamping of a political system they say is corrupt and inept.

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With youth unemployment running at over 30 percent, school students have joined en masse since Wednesday demanding a better country so they don't have to emigrate.

In Beirut, a teenage student who gave her name as Qamar was among thousands of pupils chanting slogans outside the ministry of education on Friday.

Also read: Protesters demand resignation of Prime Minister Saad Hariri

"So what if we lose a school year compared to our entire future?" she said. "I don't want to study in Lebanon and then have to travel abroad" to find a job.

Around her, students waved red-green-and-white Lebanese flags, as others set off yellow, green, blue and purple flares into the sky.

Another poster in rhyming Arabic said: "No studying or teaching, until the president falls."

Across Lebanon, students protested outside state institutions and banks including in the southern city of Saida, Tripoli in the north and the east's Baalbek.

What started as a spontaneous and leaderless movement has become more organised in recent days, with protesters targeting institutions viewed as particularly inefficient or corrupt.

Early Friday, dozens of activists and retired army officers for the first time briefly closed down the entrance to Beirut's port.

Read more: Lebanon protest

Among them, music producer Zeid Hamdan, 43, had come to denounce what he viewed as a customs collection system riddled with corruption.

"As a musician whenever I bring an instrument into the country, I pay 40 percent of it" to customs, he said, sporting a light beard and wearing sunglasses.

"It stays stuck in the port for weeks. You need connections, to bribe everybody to get it out," he said.

Lebanon's cabinet stepped down last week but no official consultations have started on forming a new government, and outgoing premier Saad Hariri remains in a caretaker capacity.

The World Bank has urged Lebanon to form a new government quickly, warning of the threat of a further economic downturn in a country where almost a third of the population lives in poverty.

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