Khazen

Hundreds flee as clashes kill 3 at Lebanese Palestinian camp

AP, Sidon, Lebanon // Fighting between rival armed groups in Lebanon’s largest Palestinian camp killed three people on Tuesday and forced hundreds of residents to flee.

The fighting in the Ain Al Helweh camp near the southern port city of Sidon began on Saturday following a failed assassination attempt on an official of Palestinian president Mahmoud Abbas’s Fatah movement.

Ashraf Dabbour, the Palestinian ambassador to Lebanon, told Beirut-based Al Mayadeen TV that a ceasefire agreement was reached late on Monday, but clashes erupted again on Tuesday.

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Will Lebanon Fall to ISIS Next? Lebanon’s got 99 problems and trash is just one

 

Three Gulf countries have issued warnings over travel to Lebanon after peaceful anti-government demonstrations in Beirut turned violent over the weekend.

Bahrain, Kuwait and Saudi Arabia issued the warnings after protests that began over the country’s uncollected rubbish escalated into mass protests over perceived government corruption, and power and water shortages.

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It is hard to say what is going to happen, but there is reason for concern and our domestic media is not addressing this increasingly deteriorating situation.

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6 ministers storm out Lebanese Cabinet amid trash crisis

 

Lebanese activists paint graffiti on the a concrete wall installed by authorities near the main Lebanese government building, a day after violent anti-government protests, in downtown Beirut, Lebanon, Monday, Aug. 24, 2015. Anticipating more protests, authorities installed a concrete wall near the main Lebanese government building, site of the largest protests. Organizers of the "You stink" protests that have captivated the Lebanese capital postponed anti-government demonstrations set for Monday evening after a night of violent clashes with police during which dozens of protesters and police officers were wounded. (AP Photo/Hassan Ammar)

Lebanese activists hang Lebanese national flags on a concrete wall installed by authorities near the main Lebanese government building, in downtown Beirut, Lebanon, Tuesday, Aug. 25, 2015. Anticipating more protests, authorities installed a concrete wall near the main Lebanese government building, site of the largest protests. On Saturday and Sunday nights, police fired tear gas and water cannons at the protesters, battling them in the streets of Beirut in dramatic clashes, wounding dozens. (AP Photo/Hassan Ammar)

Water bottles are gathered to be recycled near a statue in Martyrs’ Square in Beirut, Lebanon August 25, 2015. Lebanon’s cabinet held an emergency meeting on Tuesday in its newly fortified headquarters after protests over trash collection spilled over into street violence and calls for the feuding government to resign. REUTERS/Jamal Saidi

 

A Lebanese man takes a photograph through a concrete wall installed by authorities near the main Lebanese government building, in downtown Beirut, Lebanon, Tuesday, Aug. 25, 2015. Anticipating more protests, authorities installed a concrete wall near the main Lebanese government building, site of the largest protests. On Saturday and Sunday nights, police fired tear gas and water cannons at the protesters, battling them in the streets of Beirut in dramatic clashes, wounding dozens. (AP Photo/Bilal Hussein)

Lebanese women have their picture taken in front a concrete wall installed by authorities near the main Lebanese government building, in downtown Beirut, Lebanon, Tuesday, Aug. 25, 2015. Anticipating more protests, authorities installed a concrete wall near the main Lebanese government building, site of the largest protests. On Saturday and Sunday nights, police fired tear gas and water cannons at the protesters, battling them in the streets of Beirut in dramatic clashes, wounding dozens. (AP Photo/Hassan Ammar)

 Al Arabiya:

An emergency Lebanese cabinet meeting on Tuesday has ended in failure in a bid to address the trash crisis amid street violence and calls for the feuding government to resign.

An agreement was reached, however, on cancelling all the tenders from companies to remove the piling garbage that have been previously announced.

Al Arabiya News channel’s correspondent in Beirut confirmed the withdrawal of members from Hezbollah and its allies, the Free Patriotic Movement and the Armenian Tashnag Party in Lebanon from the talks on Tuesday.

Six ministers from the Hezbollah group and its allies withdrew four hours into the meeting. Foreign Minister Gibran Bassil said he was also pulling out because of a "theater" being performed with regards to the trash issue, according to the Associated Press.

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Lebanon cartoons vent anger at rubbish crisis

BBC news: Absence of the state’ – An-Nahar newspaper: The image on the right shows sandbags in 1975, the year that Lebanon’s Civil War broke out. On the left, the same scene, only with rubbish sacks

Time-bomb – Al-Joumhouria newspaper

Cartoon depicting a rubbish bag with a lit fuse as a bomb ready to go off.

"The solution lies in sorting rubbish" – Al-Joumhouria Green bin: "Political waste"; Yellow: "Terrorist waste"; Red: "Sectarian waste"

Ad-Dabbour magazine

Woman: "You didn’t tell me where you live… "

Man-sized rat: "Under your house, in the trash pile"

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The Battle For Lebanon’s Beaches

Alice Fordham NPR

The sun is beating down on the rocky shore of Lebanon’s capital, Beirut, and architect Mona Hallak is taking her son and his friends to see their heritage. "Who knows how to swim?" asks Hallak, an advocate for public beaches in Lebanon.

The kids say they can, but they learned in private beach clubs. Hallak tells them of the past, when Beirutis learned to swim in the sea because the shore was all public. She shows them a nearby area that was open and has been fenced off. She fears it too will be built on as many other places have been.

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Lebanon rubbish protest shelved as crisis deepens

#khazen Aug. 24 — Bloomberg’s Vonnie Quinn highlights the photos illustrating headlines from around the world on "Bloomberg Surveillanc

 

#khazen At least one protester died after violent clashes with police in Beirut over the weekend, as thousands filled the streets around downtown Martyrs’ Square on August 22 and 23 in anti-government protests focusing around the issue of waste management. This dramatic drone footage shows the scale of the protests on Sunday, August 23. Credit: YouTube/Tarek Chehab

 

A woman walks near shattered glass as the word "revolution" is seen on a broken advertising billboard in downtown Beirut, Lebanon August 24, 2015. Lebanese protesters said they had postponed a demonstration set for Monday evening, after rallies a day earlier triggered clashes with security forces in Beirut. Protests against the Lebanese government turned violent on Sunday, and Prime Minister Tammam Salam threatened to resign as public discontent brought thousands into the streets. REUTERS/Jamal Saidi

 

A woman covers her nose as she passes by waste management workers as they collect a pile of garbage near the government building a day after a violent protests against the ongoing trash crisis, in downtown Beirut, Lebanon, Monday, Aug. 24, 2015. Organizers of the “You stink” protests that have captivated the Lebanese capital postponed demonstrations set for Monday evening after a night of violent clashes with police during which dozens of protesters and police officers were wounded. (AP Photo/Hassan Ammar

 

 

A protester holds up a Lebanese flag as he passes by an Arabic writing on a wall in Arabic that reads, "Solidere = trash,", a day after a violent protests against the ongoing trash crisis, in downtown Beirut, Lebanon, Monday, Aug. 24, 2015. Organizers of the “You stink” protests that have captivated the Lebanese capital postponed demonstrations set for Monday evening after a night of violent clashes with police during which dozens of protesters and police officers were wounded. (AP Photo/Hassan Ammar) #khazen

 

#khazen Protesters carry banners and a Lebanese national flag as they sit along a wall of concrete barriers erected by security forces on Monday to increase security, a day after protests against the government turned into violent clashes with police, near the government palace in Beirut, Lebanon August 24, 2015. Lebanese protesters postponed an anti-government demonstration set for Monday, after two days of rallies over uncollected garbage ignited fierce clashes and threatened the survival of the government, plunging Lebanon deeper into crisis. The banner (L) reads, "I swear to God, I thought I was at the borders with Israel". REUTERS/Mohamed Azakir

 

BBC news

Organisers of protests over the failure of Lebanon’s government to clear rubbish from the streets of Beirut have postponed a rally planned for Monday. But the "You Stink" campaign said the decision did not mean it was finished.

The move comes after two days of demonstrations in the capital descended into clashes in which dozens of protesters and police were hurt. Prime Minister Tammam Salam has appealed for calm and threatened to resign over the crisis.In a televised address on Sunday, he warned that Lebanon was heading towards collapse, with the country’s "political garbage" crippling his unity cabinet.

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Lebanon’s PM Threatens To Resign As Protesters Rally In Beirut

 

 

 

 

BBEIRUT, Aug 23 (Reuters) – Lebanon’s prime minister threatened to resign on Sunday, warning rival parties in his unity cabinet that the state faced collapse because of paralysis that has come to a head with its failure to resolve a crisis over rubbish disposal.

Protesters called for a second day of demonstrations against Prime Minister Tammam Salam’s cabinet on Sunday after at least 35 people were injured on Saturday night when security forces used water cannons and tear gas to disperse several thousand demonstrators in central Beirut.

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Gunfire, Tear Gas as Lebanese Police Fight Beirut Protesters

By ZEINA KARAM Associated Press

 

 

 

Police firing tear gas and water cannons battled thousands of Lebanese protesters Saturday demonstrating against government corruption and political dysfunction amid a trash crisis, with the sound of gunfire echoing through the streets into the night.

Footage on local television showed at least one wounded protester among downtown Beirut’s Ottoman-era buildings and lavish apartment complexes. An Associated Press journalist saw riot police used batons to beat back protesters while others were carried away, overcome by tear gas. Private television station LBC reported police attacked one of its crew.

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