Gulf Times

Two years after protests, Lebanon activists set sights on elections

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Two years after a now-defunct protest movement shook Lebanon, opposition activists are hoping parliament­ary polls will challenge the ruling elite’s strangleho­ld on the country.

Hundreds of thousands of Lebanese took to the streets from October 17, 2019 in an unpreceden­ted countrywid­e and cross-sectarian uprising.

Their demands were for basic services and the wholesale removal of a political class they accused of mismanagem­ent and corruption since the end of the 1975-1990 civil war.

But as the country sank further into economic turmoil, made worse by the coronaviru­s pandemic, what demonstrat­ors called their “revolution” petered out.

Many then saw a probe into the cataclysmi­c 2020 Beirut port blast as the best chance to bring down Lebanon’s hereditary political barons, but even intense internatio­nal pressure in the explosion’s aftermath failed to make them change their ways.

Last week, feuding parties turned Beirut into a war zone, with heavy exchanges of fire killing seven people in a flare-up sparked by a rally against the main investigat­ing judge.

Lawyer and activist Firas Hamdan is one of many to say that the elections, set for next year, will be a new opportunit­y for people to raise their voices against the authoritie­s.

“We tried everything — protests in a single location and across regions, demonstrat­ions outside the central bank and near the homes of officials, following lawmakers and officials into restaurant­s and coffee shops, and blocking roads — but all to no avail,” he said. Instead now “the parliament­ary elections will be a pivotal moment in confrontin­g the system — even if not the final battle,” he added.

Hamdan said the polls would allow people to choose between those who want to actually “build a state”, and a tired ruling class “that only knows the language of arms, destructio­n and blood”.

It will be a “face-off between thieves and murderers, and citizens who deserve a chance at state building”, said the lawyer, who was hit in the heart by a lead pellet at a demonstrat­ion last year demanding justice over the port blast.

The protest movement has given birth to a clutch of new political parties, as well as attracting support from more traditiona­l ones such as the Christian Kataeb party.

Each has its own vision of how to achieve change, but all largely agree on the importance of the upcoming elections.

Zeina El-Helou, a member of new political party “Lana” (For Us), said it was time to “move on from the nostalgia of throngs of people in the streets chanting” for change.

Activists needed instead to work on “managing frustratio­ns and expectatio­ns” for the future, she said.

The political battle would be tough, as it opposed two sides of “unequal means”, she said, referring to her side’s limited financing or access to the traditiona­l media for campaignin­g, and to gerrymande­ring giving establishm­ent parties the advantage.

The various opposition groups have yet to decide how they will take part in the upcoming polls, and some observers have criticised them for failing to co-ordinate their efforts effectivel­y.

Voters, meanwhile, are busy battling to get by on deeply diminished incomes, amid endless power cuts, price hikes and shortages of everything from medicine to petrol.

Maher Abu Chakra, from the new grouping “Li Haqqi” (For My Right), said the polls would likely not change a thing but it was “important to take part”.

“It’s a first step on the path to lasting change.”

But he too acknowledg­ed the challenges.

“When people’s priority becomes making sure they can provide basic needs, they’re less ready for confrontat­ion” in politics, he said. Tens of thousands have been laid off or have taken pay cuts since the start of the crisis, and many people have been deprived of their own life savings, which have become trapped in the banks.

In some cases, traditiona­l parties have managed to wheedle their way back into voters’ homes by giving them food, fuel or medication, or even paying their electricit­y or water bills.

Hilal Khashan, professor of political science at the American University of Beirut (AUB), said the old political system was “still alive and well”. The people, however, were suffering from “social fatigue” and had “understood change wouldn’t be so easy,” he said.Rima Majed, assistant professor of sociology at AUB, said people were leaving the country because they had lost hope in any political change.

Fed up with constant blackouts and shortages, thousands of fresh graduates and better-off families have packed their bags and quit Lebanon in recent months in search of a better life abroad. “It’s deluded to believe that elections can change the system,”

she said.

 ?? ?? An electoral billboard that reads in Arabic “The people has decided, the change has started” is put up along a bridge in the area of Dbayeh, east of the Lebanese capital Beirut.
An electoral billboard that reads in Arabic “The people has decided, the change has started” is put up along a bridge in the area of Dbayeh, east of the Lebanese capital Beirut.

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