Protesters Paralyze Lebanon Amid Political, Economic Crisis

Protesters closed all major roads leading to the Lebanese capital on Monday, causing traffic jams and triggering a call by the head of the hospitals union who warned that such moves are preventing oxygen supplies from reaching medical centers treating coronavirus patients.
The
dayslong protests come against the backdrop of a crash in the local currency,
increase of consumer goods prices and political bickering between rival groups
that has delayed the formation of a new government.
Since
the early morning hours, small groups of demonstrators blocked the southern,
northern and eastern entrances to Beirut with burning tires and by parking
vehicles on the main roads. In other parts of Lebanon, army soldiers briefly
opened some roads only to have protesters close them again shortly afterward.
Sleiman
Haroun, President of the Syndicate of Hospitals in Lebanon, told The Associated
Press that after a two-day weekend when there is no oxygen distribution, some
hospitals are running low and urgently need supplies, especially to treat
COVID-19 patients.
“This is not a joke. It is a matter of
life and death,” Haroun said urging protesters to allow vehicles carrying
supplies of oxygen to pass. There are several oxygen plants around Lebanon and
they supply hospitals throughout the country, including some in remote areas.
Despite
a weekslong lockdown in Lebanon, cases of coronavirus remain high in the tiny
country, with 2,377 new cases registered on Sunday, raising the total cases
since February last year to more than 395,000. The virus has also killed 5,047
people, including 33 on Sunday.
On
Saturday, Lebanon’s caretaker Prime Minister Hassan Diab warned that the
country was quickly headed toward chaos and appealed to politicians to put
aside their differences in order to form a new government that can attract
desperately needed foreign assistance.
In
October, former Prime Minister Saad Hariri was named to form a new Cabinet but
five months later, disagreements between him and President Michel Aoun on the
shape of the Cabinet has stood in the way of a new government’s formation.
The
local currency hit a record law against the US dollar on Saturday getting to
close to 11,000 pounds on the black market.
Lebanon has been hit by one crisis after another, starting with nationwide protests in October 2019 that revealed a severe financial and economic crisis. The situation was made worse by coronavirus and a massive blast at Beirut’s port in August that killed 211, wounded more than 6,000 and damaged large parts of Beirut.