Khazen

Hezbollah and Christian allies boycott Lebanese government meeting

Middle-east Monitor The Lebanese Shiite group Hezbollah and its Christian political allies have boycotted a cabinet meeting yesterday, highlighting the growing political tension that has paralysed the country’s national unity government led by Prime Minister Tammam Salam. The cabinet meeting was not attended by the Free Patriotic Movement (FPM), led by Christian politician Michel Aoun, […]

Read more
Lebanon Interior Minister Calls for Restraint in Protests

AP

Security forces have orders to show restraint at a planned mass protest against Lebanon’s government this weekend, but will not tolerate attempts by "thugs" to make trouble, Lebanon’s interior minister said Friday.

Two rallies in the capital of Beirut last weekend drew 20,000 people, and dozens were hurt in clashes between protesters and security forces at the time.

Read more
Lebanon: Witnesses Detail Police Violence

hrw.org

(Beirut) – Lebanese authorities should take immediate measures to ensure that there is no repeat of violence against protestors in downtown Beirut and that perpetrators of violent attacks are held accountable, Human Rights Watch said today.

Lebanese security personnel used rubber bullets, tear gas canisters, water cannons, butts of rifles, and batons to control protesters on August 22 and 23 in downtown Beirut. Security forces also fired live ammunition, reportedly in the air, to disperse protesters.

Read more
ISIS has just ripped a community’s heart out

Catholic Herald magazine

When I first moved to Dayr Mar Elian in the summer of 2001 I was slightly disconcerted when the Qurwani, as the people of Qaryatayn are known, kept asking me if I had met Mar Elian yet. Since he is believed to have died more than 1,500 years ago, I thought that they meant had I seen the sarcophagus, which of course I had. When I said this I was somewhat perplexed to realise that I had misunderstood the question (complicated, of course, by my faltering Arabic and their thick regional dialect).

Read more
Archbishop of Damascus: Nine dead and 47 injured in “rain of mortars” in Syria

catholicherald.co.uk

The Maronite Archbishop of Damascus has spoken about the moment bombs rained down on his neighbourhood – killing nine people and injuring 50.

Two churches were the target of “a rain of mortars” on Sunday, August 23 – with shells crashing through the archbishop’s church roof. “Part of the war in Syria is to live under indiscriminate bombing,” Archbishop Samir Nassar said, “a kind of Russian roulette which is always unpredictable.”

Read more
Things to Know About Lebanon’s Government

Lebanon’s Prime Minister Tammam Salam heads a cabinet meeting at the government palace in Beirut, Lebanon August 27, 2015. The Lebanese group Hezbollah and allied Christian politicians are boycotting the cabinet meeting, deepening a political crisis that has paralyzed Prime Minister Salam’s national unity government. REUTERS/Mohamed Azakir

n this Saturday, Aug. 8, 2015, file photo, a Lebanese protester chants slogans against the Lebanese government during a demonstration against the ongoing trash crisis, at the Martyrs square in downtown Beirut, Lebanon. Her placard in Arabic read: "We got nothing from you but garbage." Starting out as a small group of tech-savvy young activists who organized to protest the garbage that for weeks has been piling up on Beirut’s streets, Lebanon’s "You Stink" movement has now grown into a popular uprising that seeks to nip at the power base of an entire political class. Arabic on sign reads: ‘Nothing comes from you but garbage’. (AP Photo/Bilal Hussein, File)

Lebanese Army soldiers patrol downtown Beirut, during a protest against the trash crisis and government corruption, Lebanon, Wednesday, Aug. 26, 2015. Hundreds of people have kept up protests in Beirut as a crisis over garbage collection worsens with fresh piles of trash accumulating in streets of the capital. (AP Photo/Hassan Ammar)

People chant slogans and carry signs as they take part in a march from downtown Beirut towards the American University of Beirut (AUB) hospital, August 26, 2015, to express solidarity with a protester who was injured during clashes with police on Sunday.

 

The Lebanese group Hezbollah and allied Christian politicians will boycott a cabinet meeting on Thursday, deepening a political crisis that has paralyzed Prime Minister Tammam Salam’s national unity government.

Media run by Hezbollah and the Free Patriotic Movement (FPM) of Christian politician Michel Aoun, the Shi’ite group’s main Christian ally, reported that Salam had been informed of the decision, but did not immediately give a reason for it.

Ministers from Hezbollah and Aoun’s FPM walked out of a cabinet session on Tuesday. They are in dispute with other members of the government over issues including decrees passed without their approval.

 

REUTERS/Aziz Taher

Lebanon’s convoluted system of governance has taken center stage this week, as public service demonstrations swell on the streets of downtown Beirut.  The Mediterranean country’s current political system was forged after a 15-year civil war that ended in 1989 with the Saudi Arabian-negotiated Taif Agreement. Its parliamentary government system is based on securing representation for the country’s numerous religious sects. The system gives relatively small parties disproportionate political weight, enough to block important legislation.

Read more
Holy See declines to co-sponsor Palestinian flag initiative at UN

catholicherald.co.uk

The Holy See has asked to be removed from a draft resolution prepared by the Palestinian United Nations (UN) mission which calls for the flags of Palestine and the Holy See to fly at the UN.

According to a Reuters report, the Palestinian draft resolution calls for the flags of non-member observer states to “be raised at the United Nations Headquarters and Offices following the flags of the member states of the United Nations.”

The Holy See and the State of Palestine are both non-member observer states at the UN. Currently, only member states’ flags fly at the UN’s headquarters.

Read more
How Lebanon’s rubbish spurred a budding revolution

Lebanese protesters pose for a photograph as other set fire to plastic barriers and trash behind the barbed wire separating them from the police, during a protest against the trash crisis and government corruption, in downtown Beirut, Lebanon, Tuesday, Aug. 25, 2015. The powerful Lebanese Shiite group Hezbollah threw its weight behind mass protests calling for the government’s resignation Tuesday, deepening a crisis that started over trash collection but is tapping into a much deeper malaise. (AP Photo/Hassan Ammar)

Lebanese riot policemen clash with Lebanese protesters during a protest against the trash crisis and government corruption, in downtown Beirut, Lebanon, Tuesday, Aug. 25, 2015. The powerful Lebanese Shiite group Hezbollah threw its weight behind mass protests calling for the government’s resignation Tuesday, deepening a crisis that started over trash collection but is tapping into a much deeper malaise. (AP Photo/Hassan Ammar)

Lebanese activists clash with riot policemen, during a protest against the ongoing trash crisis, in downtown Beirut, Lebanon, Tuesday, Aug. 25, 2015. The powerful Lebanese Shiite group Hezbollah threw its weight behind mass protests calling for the government’s resignation Tuesday, deepening a crisis that started over trash collection but is tapping into a much deeper malaise. (AP Photo/Bilal Hussein)

Lebanese policemen stoop over and beat a protester, his leg seen emerging on the right, during a protest against the ongoing trash crisis, in downtown Beirut, Lebanon, Tuesday, Aug. 25, 2015. The powerful Lebanese Shiite group Hezbollah threw its weight behind mass protests calling for the government’s resignation Tuesday, deepening a crisis that started over trash collection but is tapping into much deeper malaise. (AP Photo/Bilal Hussein)

Lebanese paramedics carry away an injured demonstrator, during a protest against the ongoing trash crisis, in downtown Beirut, Lebanon, Tuesday, Aug. 25, 2015. The powerful Lebanese Shiite group Hezbollah threw its weight behind mass protests calling for the government’s resignation Tuesday, deepening a crisis that started over trash collection but is tapping into a much deeper malaise. (AP Photo/Bilal Hussein)

Al Jazzera

What ostensibly began as public frustration over the Lebanese government’s failure to tackle the country’s rubbish crisis has since swelled into massive street protests, with residents from across the political spectrum calling for a change in government.

Al Jazeera examines what is really behind the public outcry and how the situation might evolve from this point.

How did it all start?

Read more