World

Lebanon protesters fight on amid political deadlock

October 31, 2019
TOPSHOT - A Lebanese protester looses consciousness as riot police officers remove anti-government protesters blocking the road at the ring-bridge in the Lebanese capital Beirut on October 31, 2019. Demonstrators kept up their roadblocks across Lebanon today, as their unprecedented protest movement demanding systemic political change entered its third week. Traffic came to a standstill on major highways, as protesters erected metal barricades.
 / AFP / ANWAR AMRO
TOPSHOT - A Lebanese protester looses consciousness as riot police officers remove anti-government protesters blocking the road at the ring-bridge in the Lebanese capital Beirut on October 31, 2019. Demonstrators kept up their roadblocks across Lebanon today, as their unprecedented protest movement demanding systemic political change entered its third week. Traffic came to a standstill on major highways, as protesters erected metal barricades. / AFP / ANWAR AMRO

BEIRUT — Lebanese protesters faced off with security forces Thursday as they tried to block reopened roads and prevent their unprecedented non-sectarian push for radical reform from petering out.

The resignation of Prime Minister Saad Hariri's government on Tuesday had been met with cheers from the crowds seeking the removal of a political class seen as corrupt, incompetent and sectarian.

The fall of the government under pressure from the street had led to an easing of the lockdown that has crippled the country of six million inhabitants.

While some life returned to the streets of Beirut and other cities this week, die-hard protesters were reluctant to lose one of the few forms of leverage they have to press demands that go far beyond the cabinet's resignation.

"Giving up is out of the question," said Tarek Badoun, 38, one of a group of demonstrators blocking the main flyover in central Beirut.

The tug-of-war between demonstrators seeking to block roads and security forces under orders to reopen the country for business repeated itself on Thursday.

The mass mobilization, which has seen hundreds of thousands protest nationwide, has so far been largely bloodless, despite sporadic scuffles with counter-demonstrators from the established political parties.

Some schools have reopened this week and banks were due to reopen on Friday, as the protests piled more economic pressure on a country that has been sliding towards default in recent months.

"The political class is banking on the protests running out of steam, that much is clear," said Karim Bitar, a professor of international relations in Paris and Beirut.

"It hopes the Lebanese, choked by economic hardship, will resume their daily lives," he said.

President Michel Aoun has asked Hariri's government to stay on in a caretaker capacity until a new one can be formed, but Lebanon has entered a phase of acute political uncertainty, even by its own dysfunctional standards.

Aoun, who was elected president exactly three years ago, was expected to give a speech later Thursday.

With a power-sharing system organized along communal and sectarian lines, the allocation of ministerial posts can typically take months, a delay Lebanon's donors say the debt-ridden country can ill afford.

French Foreign Minister Jean-Yves Le Drian said it was "essential for Lebanon's future that a new government be formed rapidly to carry out the reforms that the country needs".

The new government would need to "address the legitimate aspirations expressed by Lebanese and take the decisions indispensable to the country's economic recovery", he said.

France is a major donor to Lebanon and retains significant influence in its former colony.

Consultations for the formation of a new government have not yet started, such is the rift between Hariri and his coalition rivals, according to a political source involved in discussions.

The source said that consultations are scheduled to begin on Monday.

"We have decided to stay on the streets because we don't feel like the government is serious about speeding up the formation of a cabinet," said Mohammad, 39, who was demonstrating near the northern city of Tripoli.

Among the possible scenarios is one in which Hariri would return to the helm of revamped line-up that includes technocrats, one of the demands of the protesters.

"A technocratic government is a possibility," political analyst Amal Saad-Ghorayeb said.

"It would have to ensure a short-term stabilization of the economy, which has spiraled out of control these past weeks, while ensuring economic reforms pass quickly, otherwise mass protests will erupt once again," she added.

Ghassan Al-Azzi, a political science professor at the Lebanese University, said there was a concern among protesters "that a technocratic government would still include party loyalists", such as Hariri.

The Hezbollah movement headed by Hassan Nasrallah was a key player in the outgoing cabinet and had warned repeatedly against the chaos a government resignation could cause.

The Shiite movement is allied to the Christian movement of President Michel Aoun, who had also counseled against a mass resignation.

He is thought to be insisting on keeping his son-in-law Gebran Bassil, who is Lebanon's foreign minister and one of the most reviled figures among protesters, in government. — AFP


October 31, 2019
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