New Straits Times

Lebanon drops WhatsApp levy plan after protests

-

Protesters across Lebanon blocked roads with burning tyres yesterday and marched here for a second day of demonstrat­ions targeting the government over a deep economic crisis.

In Lebanon’s biggest protest in years, thousands of people gathered outside the government headquarte­rs here on Thursday, forcing the cabinet to backtrack on plans to raise a new tax on WhatsApp voice calls. Tear gas was fired as some demonstrat­ors and police clashed in the early hours.

Fires lit in the street in central Beirut were smoulderin­g yesterday morning. Pavements were scattered with the glass of several smashed shop-fronts and billboards had been torn down.

Protesters blocked roads in the north, the south and the Bekaa Valley, among other areas. Schools were closed on the instructio­ns of the government.

“We are one people united against the state. We want it to fall,” a protester in Jeita town said. “Revolution, revolution!” they chanted.

Two foreign workers choked to death from a fire that spread to a building near the protests here.

This was the second wave of nationwide protests this month.

In a country fractured along sectarian lines, the unusually wide geographic reach of these protests has been seen as a sign of deepening anger with politician­s who have jointly led Lebanon into crisis.

The government, which includes nearly all of Lebanon’s main parties, is struggling to implement long-delayed reforms that are seen as more vital than ever to begin resolving the crisis.

Lebanese newspaper an-Nahar described it as “a tax intifada”, or uprising, across Lebanon. Another daily, al-Akhbar, declared it “the WhatsApp revolution” that had shaken Prime Minister Saad al-Hariri’s unity government.

Seeking ways to boost revenues, a government minister on Thursday announced plans to raise a new fee of 20 cents per day for calls via voice over Internet protocol used by applicatio­ns, including Facebook-owned WhatsApp.

But as the protests spread, Telecoms Minister Mohamed Choucair phoned into Lebanese broadcaste­rs on Thursday to say the proposed levy on WhatsApp calls had been revoked.

Shattered by war between 1975 and 1990, Lebanon has one of the world’s highest debt burdens as a share of its economy. Economic growth has been hit by regional conflict and instabilit­y. Unemployme­nt among those aged under 35 runs at 37 per cent.

The kind of steps needed to fix the national finances have long proven elusive. Sectarian politician­s, many of them civil war veterans, have long used state resources for their own political benefit and are reluctant to cede prerogativ­es.

The crisis has been compounded by a slowdown in capital flows to Lebanon, which has long depended on remittance­s from its diaspora to meet financing needs, including the state’s deficit.

Page 41 pic: Lebanese demonstrat­ors gathering on a highway blocked by a tyre fire during a protest against dire economic conditions in Beirut yesterday. AFP PIC

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from Malaysia