'We are Hungry': Lebanese Protest Worsening Economic Crisis

W460

Outraged protesters returned to the streets of Lebanon's capital Tuesday, blocking roads with burning tires and garbage containers as the currency continued to plummet to all-time lows and the country's financial crisis intensified.

The protests resumed -- although in smaller numbers -- following several days of relative calm as the Lebanese pound continued its slide, plunging to a new low of 15,000 to the U.S. dollar on the black market.

"Where are the people? Come down, we are hungry, we are fed up!" yelled Ahmad Shuman, a protester frustrated at the small number of people taking part in demonstrations.

"The rate is now 15,000 and rising. We the people are hungry," another protester told local television.

"Political leaders are sitting at home. What more do they want? For a Lebanese to set himself or his children on fire?"

In another Beirut neighborhood, small groups of young men, some driving scooters, pelted shop windows with stones and asked them to close in rejection of the dollar exchange rate surge.

The currency has lost 90% of its value since October 2019, when anti-government protests erupted, including more than 25% in the past few weeks alone. Senior politicians, meanwhile, have refused to work together to form a new government that would implement the reforms needed to extract the nation from the crisis.

The currency crash has pushed more than half the population into poverty as prices soar. It has also depleted foreign reserves, raising concerns that Lebanon's central bank will end subsidies of some basic commodities, including fuel in coming weeks.

The crisis is posing the gravest threat to Lebanon's stability since the 1975-90 civil war. France's foreign minister warned last week that Lebanon is running out of time before total collapse, putting the blame squarely on the country's leaders whose refusal to come together to form a government has exacerbated the crisis.

U.S. State Department deputy spokeswoman Jalina Porter, speaking to reporters in Washington on Monday, said the U.S. is concerned about developments in Lebanon and the apparent inaction of the country's leadership in the face of multiple ongoing crises.

"Lebanon's political leaders need to put aside their partisan brinkmanship and form a government that will quickly implement critical and long-needed reforms, restore investor confidence, and rescue the country's economy," she said.

Lebanon's government resigned in August following a massive explosion at Beirut's port that killed 211 people, wounded more than 6,000 and damaged entire neighborhoods in the capital.

Disagreements between President Michel Aoun and Prime Minister-designate Saad Hariri have so far delayed the formation of a Cabinet. Hariri was chosen for the post in October.

Comments 3
Thumb canadianleb 16 March 2021, 19:46

This is all a waste of time and creating pollution. The protesters need to storm the parliament and the houses where all the thieves live and drag them to the streets and hang them all. Until they round the political class up nothing will change rest assured. So stop fooling yourselves with these fake protests which are most likely supported by one political party or another...

Thumb warrior 16 March 2021, 20:49

'We are Hungry': But look how lucky you are; You have a strong 'Christian' president protecting 'Christian' rights and resistance with thousands of long range missiles.

Thumb i.report 16 March 2021, 21:27

Hang the politicians , hang the terrorists!