Las Vegas Review-Journal

Riots in Lebanon over economic crisis injure 10 soldiers, several protesters

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The army said rioters on motorcycle­s threw stun grenades at troops in Tripoli injuring nine soldiers, while another was injured when hit by a stone. Protesters attacked several state institutio­ns in the city.

BEIRUT — Lebanese troops deployed in the northern city of Tripoli early Sunday taking positions around major state institutio­ns after a night of protests and riots against worsening living conditions left several protesters and 10 soldiers injured.

Sporadic protests were reported throughout Lebanon on Saturday as the country’s 20-month economic crisis worsened. The World Bank described the crisis as one of the worst the world has witnessed in 150 years. It is coupled with a political deadlock that has left Lebanon without a government since August.

The largest protests were in the southern port city of Sidon and in Tripoli, Lebanon’s second largest city and most impoverish­ed. Sporadic protests and road closures took place in the capital Beirut.

Lebanon has been suffering severe shortages of vital products including fuel, medicine and medical products, angering the public.

Lebanon’s currency hit a record low Saturday, reaching

18,000 pounds to the U.S. dollar.

The pound has lost more than 90 percent of its value since the crisis began.

In October 2019 protesters called for the removal of the political class that has run the country since the end of the 1975-90 civil war and has been blamed for corruption and mismanagem­ent that has ruined the country’s economy.

The army said rioters on motorcycle­s threw stun grenades at troops in Tripoli injuring nine soldiers, while another was injured when hit by a stone. Protesters attacked several state institutio­ns in the city.

The situation in Lebanon is not expected to improve as political bickering between President Michel Aoun and Prime Minister-designate Saad Hariri has delayed the formation of a government since Hariri was named to the post in October. Talks with the Internatio­nal Monetary Fund over the economic crisis have been suspended since last year.

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