The Star Malaysia

Protesters block roads in parts of Lebanon

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BEIRUT: Protesters blocked roads in Beirut and other parts of Lebanon, pressing a wave of demonstrat­ions against the ruling elite that have plunged the country into political turmoil at a time of acute economic crisis.

The nationwide protests, which were ignited on Oct 17 by a government proposal to tax WhatsApp calls, led Saad al-Hariri to resign as prime minister last week.

Formal consultati­ons over the formation of a new Cabinet have yet to begin.

Protesters blocked main highways north and south of Beirut and in other areas, including the northern city of Tripoli, yesterday.

“The slogan is ‘this revolution doesn’t know sleep, form the government today’,” said Hashem Adnan, who was blocking the Ring Bridge in Beirut, demanding a new Cabinet independen­t of the political elite which protesters accuse of corruption.

“People are continuing because you know you can’t trust this regime, any part of it.”

Schools were shut for a third week.

Lebanon is grappling with the worst economic crisis since the 1975-90 civil war.

A slowdown in capital inflows has led to a scarcity of US dollars and pressure on the pegged Lebanese pound.

Lebanon is one of the world’s most heavily indebted states and is widely seen to be in need of urgent moves that would narrow the government’s gaping deficit and revive confidence.

A semblance of normality had gradually returned to the country last week after Hariri’s resignatio­n, and banks reopened for the first time in two weeks on Friday.

Though no formal capital controls were announced, customers encountere­d new restrictio­ns on withdrawal­s of US dollars and transfers abroad.

Hariri, who is aligned with Western and Gulf Arab states, is continuing in a caretaker capacity until the formation of a new government.

The prime minister must be a Sunni Muslim under the Lebanese sectarian system of government and President Michel Aoun must designate the politician­s with most support among MPs.

Aoun, a Maronite Christian allied to the powerful, Iran-backed Syiah group Hezbollah, has yet to begin the formal consultati­ons with MPs to designate the next prime minister.

 ?? — AFP ?? Passing through: an anti-government protester carrying her dog as she walks past riot police in beirut.
— AFP Passing through: an anti-government protester carrying her dog as she walks past riot police in beirut.
 ?? — AFP ?? Chaos in the streets: security forces removing demonstrat­ors blocking a road in beirut.
— AFP Chaos in the streets: security forces removing demonstrat­ors blocking a road in beirut.

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