Clashes as protest turns violent in Lebanon
BEIRUT: Lebanese riot police fired tear gas at protesters in central Beirut on Saturday, after a planned anti-government demonstration quickly degenerated into rioting and stone-throwing confrontations between opposing camps.
A few thousand demonstrators had gathered in Martyrs’ Square hoping to reboot nationwide protests that began late last year amid an unprecedented economic and financial crisis. But tensions and divisions among protesters over the goals of the demonstration quickly became apparent as groups of protesters faced off, with the army standing between them.
Scattered groups of protesters arrived in the capital’s downtown area, only some of them wearing masks and face shields to protect against the spread of the coronavirus, in response to calls for a centralised protest to press for demands.
Lebanese rose up against their political leaders in nationwide mass protests on Oct.17 amid a spiraling economic crisis, blaming them for decades of corruption and mismanagement. The protests, which further deepened the slump, eventually lost some momentum and later were put on hold after the outbreak of the pandemic.
The government has gradually begun easing a lockdown aimed at curbing the virus, and protesters have returned to the streets in small numbers in recent days. Saturday’s protest was called for by grassroots organisations and civil society groups as well as several political parties, including some groups who have introduced for the first time demands for the militant group Hizbollah to disarm.
The participation of political groups and anti
Hizbollah slogans have upset some activists and protesters who say the focus should remain on addressing the country’s economic crisis and calling for early elections. Hundreds of Lebanese soldiers and riot police were deployed on major roads in the capital and its suburbs ahead of the protest. They later stood between supporters of Hizbollah and its allied Amal movement on one side and protesters on the other, some of whom shouted insults aimed at the Hizbollah leader, Sayyed Hassan Nasrallah.
Near the parliament building, a group of young men hurled rocks over cement barriers erected to seal off the area. Young men vandalised several storefronts, including a luxury French designer furniture company and a nearby hotel. Police responded with heavy tear gas.
The unprecedented economic crisis, nationwide protests and pandemic pose the biggest threat to stability since the end of the country’s civil war in 1990, and there are fears of a new slide into violence.