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Lebanese protesters vent rage on political barons

TRIPOLI: Angry crowds gathered outside the Tripoli homes of some of Lebanon’s top politicians on Thursday, torching rubbish and smashing surveillance cameras as rage grows over the government’s handling of the coronavirus pandemic.

“We want to burn down all their houses the way they burned our hearts,” said Omar Qarhani, an unemployed man.

“Let any politician dare to walk on the streets of Tripoli.” The impoverished northern city has seen four days of clashes between security forces and residents outraged by curfew measures they say are destroying their livelihood.

The pandemic has added to the misery of Lebanon’s worst financial downturn since the 1975-1990 civil war and stoked simmering anger against a political class seen as corrupt and incompetent.

That rage spilled onto Tripoli’s streets on Monday, and on Thursday the violence claimed its first victim — Omar Tayba, who had sustained a bullet wound during the previous night’s clashes.

The city’s political barons include some of Lebanon’s richest men, but Qarhani said they had done almost nothing to help.

“They have shamed this city,” said the 42-year-old, as around 100 demonstrators clamoured outside the house of a prominent Tripoli politician nearby.

With more than half of its population below the poverty line, Tripoli was at the forefront of a nationwide protest movement that erupted in Oct 2019 to demand deep-rooted reforms of Lebanon’s nepotistic, sectarian political system.

Humiliation

Demonstrations across the country petered out as the coronavirus pandemic spread.

A massive explosion at Beirut’s port on Aug 4 saw even the most diehard of activists retreat from the streets.

But rallies broke out again this week in Tripoli after authorities extended until Feb 8 a total lockdown meant to stem one of the world’s steepest surges in Covid-19 infections. On Thursday, a procession of army jeeps followed as demonstrators, many in full face masks, walked through neighbourhoods, dragging metal barricades and tipping over dumpsters brought to block the street.

Outside the house of top Tripoli politician Faysal Karameh, protester Adnan Abdullah vented his anger against the city’s ruling elite.

“We target the homes of politicians because they are the reason for the situation,” said the 42-year-old.

“Our leaders have been the same for 30 years. They ruined the futures of our youth and led our country to ruin.”

Outside the house of Samir al Jisr, another key political figure, demonstrators started a fire that was quickly put out by security forces.

Protesters responded by chanting: “Why are you protecting them?”

Tensions have steadily escalated in Tripoli since Monday and security forces have deployed reinforcements across the city.

On Wednesday night protesters lobbed stones, fireworks, and molotov cocktails at security forces who responded with tear gas and rubber bullets, in clashes which left 200 people wounded.

Adnan al Hakim, a 19-year-old demonstrator, was limping outside Al Jisr’s house on Thursday, a bloody bandage wrapped around his face.

He said he had been hit in the leg by a rubber bullet and bludgeoned in the face — but he remained defiant.

“We are obliged to take the streets to secure our rights,” he said.

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