Arab News

‘Loyal’ Tripoli turns its back on PM Hariri

- Najia Houssari Beirut

Lebanon’s sprawling northern port of Tripoli was once a government bastion, a springboar­d for the country’s political leadership going back decades. But in a major turnaround, the city and many of its 730,000 people have turned their backs on an increasing­ly isolated regime in protest at economic neglect and alleged corruption. Large crowds protesting in the central Abdul Hamid Karami Square for the past week have surprised observers and shocked supporters of Lebanon’s Prime Minister Saad Hariri and his Future Movement alliance.

Former Lebanese Minister and current MP Faisal Karami told Arab News that Tripoli is in a state of revolt “over poverty, marginaliz­ation, underdevel­opment, deprivatio­n and false promises.”

The city is key to the Future Movement’s political fortunes and has long been a base for

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Lebanon’s leaders, including Rafiq Hariri, father of the current prime minister.

Its transforma­tion from loyalist stronghold to vocal opponent of the regime is a major turning point. “The protests in Tripoli are driven by the youth, who first took to the streets to vent their fury over the WhatsApp tax, but they include people of all ages, social classes and religious sects,” Karami said.

Asked if the city has abandoned its traditiona­l leaders, he replied: “Today, no one can speak about the choices of the people of Tripoli. Only the results of the early elections will reveal that.”

Karami described the protests as “a spontaneou­s social explosion, the result of an accumulati­on of economic policies.”

The country’s leadership, “with its private jets and yachts, and multimilli­on-dollar wedding parties, has become a provocatio­n to the people,” he said.

Khaldoun Al-Sherif, an adviser to former Prime Minister Najib Mikati, told Arab News that protesters on the streets of Tripoli “are the same ones who did not vote during the 2018 parliament­ary elections, and they represente­d 50 percent of the voters.”

“The difference between Tripoli and other regions is that all politician­s in the city support the civil movement,” he said.

Khedr Taleb, editor-in-chief of Tripoli’s Al-Raqib magazine, said: “After the parliament­ary elections, politician­s shut their doors to the city’s people and not even a single party adopted their demands or fixed their problems.

“The city has suffered terrible economic stagnation. People in Tripoli are low-income earners. The youth unemployme­nt rate has reached unacceptab­le levels. Even those who did not take to the streets support the movement, just like the protesting youth.” Maha Aziza Sultan, an art critic and professor at the Lebanese University, has remained at home, although she strongly supports the protests.

“My city surprised me a lot,” she said. “Tripoli has been neglected for more than 30 years to the point where some streets do not receive any state services, even though it has never failed to pay its taxes.” She said: “Tripoli is a scientific and cultural city, but also home to the poor and illiterate. There are capitalist­s in the city and they are hated by the rest of the people. “This week Tripoli has said that it wants the most basic human rights, and all people in the city have been making the same demands.”

 ?? AFP ?? Lebanese protesters listen to a broadcast by their president in the town of Jal Al Dib, northeast of Beirut, on Thursday as demonstrat­ions continue.
AFP Lebanese protesters listen to a broadcast by their president in the town of Jal Al Dib, northeast of Beirut, on Thursday as demonstrat­ions continue.

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