Lebanese protesters fight to occupy downtown Beirut
When mass anti-government protests took over
downtown Beirut on October 17, many participants felt that they were reclaiming
a space that had long been sterile and off-limits. Now, new concrete blast
walls have reemerged to keep protesters out of previously reoccupied space.
“At the start, the whole downtown area, was not for
the people,” said Roula Abdo, one of a group of artists with the organization
Art of Change who have been filling the walls of downtown with murals since the
first weeks of the protests. “Now it looks a lot more like the people – it’s
more popular, it’s closer to the people in the streets. The people gained the
place back.”
In the post-war years, the downtown core was
reconstructed by Solidere, a company connected to former Prime Minister Rafic
Hariri, but the upscale shops that populated the city core were out of reach
for most Beirutis, and many of the high-rise condominiums remained empty.
But in recent days – after weeks in which protests
took a more confrontational turn, with hundreds injured in clashes between
demonstrators and security forces, and ahead of Monday’s Parliament session to
vote on the controversial 2020 budget – officials erected a new set of walls in
the heart of downtown.
The new concrete blast walls blocked Nijmeh Square,
where Parliament is located, and the Grand Serail, the seat of the Prime
Minister. Protesters and supporters saw the move as an attempt to suppress
dissent while also curtailing the public space they had been working to
reclaim.
Immediately, Abdo set to work, using the newly
erected walls as a canvas. In less than two hours on Sunday, she painted a
piece depicting a pair of hands peeling open one of the new walls. Photographs
of the mural quickly went viral on social media.
“Down with the wall of shame,” wrote activist Assaad
Thebian above a picture of Abdo’s mural on Twitter, a turn of phrase that was
echoed by many others.
Abdo said she meant the mural to be a sign of hope
and defiance.
“Some people were starting to lose hope, with all
the blockages and with all the people trying to stop us and get us out of the
street,” she said. “So, my reaction was, no, we still have hope and we are
going to go in, and we are going to break these walls and open these doors,
because the Parliament is ours. We actually elected those people to represent
us, so they cannot just keep us out and kick us out of our own place.”
On Monday, she followed up with another mural, on
another section of wall, showing an eye peering through a keyhole. The new
piece, she said, was meant to convey that authorities “are actually imprisoned
behind the walls that they’re putting [up].”
The erection of the walls marked a reversal of a
move by outgoing Interior Minister Raya al-Hassan, who had launched an
initiative last February shortly after she was appointed minister to remove
concrete security blocks around her ministry and elsewhere in Beirut. Hassan,
who was greeted with high hopes by many as the first female interior minister
in the region, had been criticized in recent weeks for allowing security forces
to use excessive force on protesters and journalists.
Mona Fawaz, a professor of urban studies and
planning at the American University of Beirut, noted that the struggle over
public space in downtown Beirut is the continuation of a long history.
“Beirut’s historic core has been the site of
contestation since the beginning of the civil war,” she said. “From the heart
of Beirut, its most bustling space, downtown became a no man’s land where only
militias’ strongmen could tread.”
Since 2005, Fawaz noted, downtown has been
periodically occupied by protesters, “at times for a collective identity, often
for specific groups who reclaimed it as ‘theirs.’”
At the beginning of the current uprising, she said,
“We witnessed a somewhat spontaneous re-appropriation of space in which
activists reclaimed through their use of various areas of downtown the city’s
core as a space of collective discussion, celebration, and political voice.”
Coming after that reclaiming of space, Fawaz said,
“The walls today are poignant testimony of the violence of the ruling elite and
the lack of democracy in Lebanon. They delineate a territory for the so-called
public representatives, the space where they can avoid hearing or seeing the
people they claim to represent.”
Abdo said she is not discouraged.
“This is just a sign that they are actually afraid
of the people now,” she said. “They are scared of what the people can do,
because, for once, the people woke up and noticed that they really have a voice
and they can change something.”