Santa Cruz Sentinel

After Lebanese revolt’s fury, waning protests face long road

- By Dalal Mawad

BEIRUT >> A year ago, hundreds of thousands of Lebanese took to the streets protesting taxes and a rapidly deteriorat­ing economic crisis. A spontaneou­s and hopeful nationwide movement was born, denouncing an entire political establishm­ent that had for decades pushed Lebanon toward collapse.

Today, as crises multiply and the country dives deeper into uncertaint­y and poverty, protests seem to have petered out. Even widespread anger over a devastatin­g explosion at Beirut’s port on Aug. 4, blamed on government negligence, failed to re-ignite the movement.

On Saturday, thousands of people marked the first anniversar­y of the protest movement in dif ferent parts of Lebanon including its three largest cities, Beirut, Tripoli and Sidon. But the protesters were far fewer than those last year.

It is both bewilderin­g and frustratin­g for those who believe only a sustained popular uprising can bring change in Lebanon.

Some argue the protests lost momentum because of the political elite’s moves to hijack and weaken the movement. Protesters have been met with violence, arrest and intimidati­on. Others say Lebanese have become numb to incompeten­ce and corruption among the political class.

But Lebanon’s confession­al- based power- sharing system also proved difficult to bring down. A revolt against the status quo means breaking a sectarian patronage network cultivated by the ruling elite that many in the divided population benefit from. Even if dissatisfi­ed, some blame other factions for the country’s problems or fear change will give another sect power over them — a fear politician­s eagerly stoke.

“We don’t have one head of state, it’s a group of men, they have agreed to divide the spoils of the state at every level. It’s a system that you can hardly topple,” said Carmen Geha, associate professor in public administra­tion and an activist. She compared the dismantlin­g of Lebanon’s system to the dismantlin­g of Apartheid in South Africa, a long and arduous process.

For all its limitation­s, the protest movement that erupted on Oct. 17, 2019 had successes.

Even after street demonstrat­ions dissipated, grassroots net work s quickly mobilized following the Beirut explosion, which killed nearly 200 and wrecked tens of thousands of homes.

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