BEIRUT — Garbage is piling up on the streets of Beirut amid a growing dispute over tiny Lebanon’s largest trash dump.
The main company in charge of picking up the trash, Sukleen, has its workers sweeping Beirut’s streets, though not picking up any of the garbage. Its spokesman said Tuesday the company can’t take any more waste to the Naameh landfill, just south of Beirut.
Naameh has been functioning since 1997, but it was scheduled to close July 17. Since then, residents of Naameh and nearby villages have prevented trucks from reaching it to unload trash.
SIS wants to shut down private internet access in the capital of its ‘Caliphate’

ISIS has announced it is going to shut down private internet access in Raqqa, the eastern Syrian city that functions as the extremist group’s de-facto capital, the Financial Times reports.
The move will make it harder for residents to keep in contact with the world beyond ISIS’s self-proclaimed "caliphate," as the only Internet connections left would be accessed through ISIS-controlled internet cafes, according to activists.
Parts of northern Syria, including Aleppo, have been without access to internet since March now.
The group circulated leaflets informing internet providers they had fours days to cut off private wifi connections, according to the Daily Telegraph. “The following is obligatory on all Internet providers: the removal of Wi-Fi connections distributed outside of Internet cafés and private connections, including for Islamic State soldiers,” the leaflet read.
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