The Sunday Guardian

Police fire tear gas at Beirut protesters angry over explosion

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BEIRUT: Riot police fired tear gas at demonstrat­ors trying to break through a barrier to get to the parliament building in Beirut on Saturday during a protest over the government’s handling of this week’s devastatin­g explosion in the city.

About 5,000 people gathered in Martyrs’ Square in the city centre, some throwing stones. Police fired tear gas when some protesters tried to break through the barrier blocking a street leading to parliament, a Reuters journalist said.

The protesters chanted “the people want the fall of the regime,” and held posters saying “Leave, you are all killers.”

“We want a future with dignity, we don’t want the blood of the victims of the explosion wasted,” said Rose Sirour, one of the demonstrat­ors. Tuesday’s blast in the port, the biggest explosion in Beirut’s history, killed 154 people, injured 5,000 and destroyed a swathe of the city.

The government has promised to hold those responsibl­e to account. Some residents, struggling to clean up shattered homes, complain the government they see as corrupt - there had been months of protests against its handling of a deep economic crisis before this week’s disaster - has let them down again. “We have no trust in our government,” said university student Celine Dibo as she scrubbed blood off the walls of her shattered apartment building. “I wish the United Nations would take over Lebanon.”

Several people said they were not at all surprised that French President Emmanuel Macron had visited their gutted neighbourh­oods this week while Lebanese leaders had not.

“We are living in ground zero. I hope another country would just take us over. Our leaders are a bunch of corrupt people,” said psychologi­st Maryse Hayek, 48, whose parents’ house was destroyed in the explosion.

Lebanon’s Kataeb Party, a Christian group that opposes the government backed by the Iran-aligned Hezbollah, announced on Saturday the resignatio­n of its three lawmakers from parliament. “I invite all lawmakers to resign so that the people can decide who will govern them,” said party chief Samy Gemayel.

 ?? Lyra Conley hugs Caesar Mccool, a therapy llama nicknamed the “No Drama Llama” at a site of ongoing protests against police violence and racial inequality, in Portland, Oregon, US, on Thursday. REUTERS ??
Lyra Conley hugs Caesar Mccool, a therapy llama nicknamed the “No Drama Llama” at a site of ongoing protests against police violence and racial inequality, in Portland, Oregon, US, on Thursday. REUTERS

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