The Star Late Edition

Violent demonstrat­ions in Lebanon

Sunni, Shia Muslims battle it out in streets after Prophet Muhammad’s wife ‘insulted’

- | dpa

VIOLENCE erupted in Beirut at the weekend between Muslim Sunni and Shia followers, prompting the Lebanese army to intervene to contain the situation and return calm to the streets.

Heavy gunfire was heard in Beirut’s mainly Sunni Muslim neighbourh­ood of Tarik al-Jedideh area and videos of gunmen shooting in the air were circulatin­g on social media.

The National News Agency said two people were wounded in Tarik al-Jedideh area.

Lebanese army troops were seen deploying in the areas that witnessed tension and some clashes.

Protesters blocked roads in Beirut’s Corniche al-Mazraa and Qasqas areas, as well as in the cities of the southern port of Sidon and the northern port city of Tripoli. Protesters also closed the coastal highway that links Beirut to the south.

Residents in the area of Corniche al-Mazraa said what sparked the violence were insults which were made against Prophet Muhammad’s wife Aisha by young demonstrat­ors.

Sunni and Shia officials as well as parties issued statements calling for calm. Dar al-Fatwa, the country’s highest Sunni religious authority, called on all Muslims to stay away from falling into the trap of a sectarian strife.

“The cursing of Sayyida Aisha can only be from a person who is ignorant,” Dar al-Fatwa said.

The Shia Lebanese movement Hezbollah issued a statement warning of some people who “are trying to ignite sectarian civil strife in the country”.

Earlier, an anti-government rally in central Beirut turned violent as clashes erupted between the protesters and followers of Hezbollah.

A security official on the scene said some anti-government protesters were chanting anti-Hezbollah slogans when a group from the Hezbollah area of Handak al-Ghamik started throwing stones at them.

“Shi’ite! Shi’ite!” the Hezbollah followers chanted as they tried to break down a security barrier the army had set up to separate the two sides.

“No one is allowed to chant against Hezbollah,” one follower said.

The Lebanese Red Crescent said on

Twitter that at least 48 people were wounded in the clashes in central Beirut. Eleven of them were transferre­d to hospitals, while the other 37 were treated at the site.

Meanwhile, anti-government protesters, mainly from Tripoli, headed towards the parliament, led by Shia leader Nabih Berri, who is close to Hezbollah, and started throwing stones at the guards.

The anti-government protesters were seen smashing shop windows near the parliament, which is heavily guarded by police and cement blocks, prompting riot police to fire tear gas towards the protesters.

Lebanese anti-government demonstrat­ors had gathered in the centre of Beirut to stage a major rally, in defiance of a coronaviru­s lockdown, to protest against worsening economic and social conditions in the country.

Wearing protective face masks decorated with the colours of the Lebanese flag, young and old converged in the vicinity of Martyrs’ Square in Beirut. They chanted in unison: “We want a better life.”

As demonstrat­ors packed the square and the surroundin­g streets, security forces closed major roads leading to the area. The rally was expected to be Lebanon’s largest since the government enforced a lockdown to curb the spread of the novel coronaviru­s and banned public gatherings in March.

“We do not want a corrupt system and politician­s to rule us anymore,” said Mona Ashour, a protester who was accompanie­d by her two children.

Saturday’s protest organisers said their action was aimed at fighting rampant corruption in the country and to prod the government, installed earlier this year, to tackle the ailing economy.

 ??  ?? A LEBANESE policeman speaks on his cellphone next to a police motorcycle set on fire by anti-government protesters during protests against the government, in downtown Beirut, Lebanon, at the weekend.
A LEBANESE policeman speaks on his cellphone next to a police motorcycle set on fire by anti-government protesters during protests against the government, in downtown Beirut, Lebanon, at the weekend.
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