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Protesters form human chain across Lebanon | Protesters form human chain across Lebanon |
(about 2 hours later) | |
Tens of thousands of Lebanese protesters have successfully formed a human chain running from the south to the north of the country to symbolise newfound national unity. | |
Demonstrators joined hands from Tripoli to Tyre, a 105-mile (170km) chain running through the capital, Beirut, where protests have been focused, as part of an unprecedented mobilisation across sectarian lines. | |
Tension has mounted in recent days between security forces and protesters, who have blocked roads and brought the country to a standstill to press their demands for an overhaul of the political system. | Tension has mounted in recent days between security forces and protesters, who have blocked roads and brought the country to a standstill to press their demands for an overhaul of the political system. |
Lebanon’s reviled political elite has defended a belated package of economic changes and appeared willing to reshuffle the government, but protesters who have stayed on the streets since 17 October want more. | |
On foot, by bicycle and on motorbikes, demonstrators and volunteers fanned out along the main north-south highway. | On foot, by bicycle and on motorbikes, demonstrators and volunteers fanned out along the main north-south highway. |
Julie Tegho Bou Nassif, a history teacher and one of the organisers, said: “I can confirm that the human chain was a success. | |
“Everything is ready, we even have volunteers on motorbikes who are helping us identify gaps in the chain. | |
“The idea behind this human chain is to show an image of a Lebanon which, from north to south, rejects any sectarian affiliation. | “The idea behind this human chain is to show an image of a Lebanon which, from north to south, rejects any sectarian affiliation. |
“There is no political demand today, we only want to send a message by simply holding hands under the Lebanese flag.” | “There is no political demand today, we only want to send a message by simply holding hands under the Lebanese flag.” |
On the Beirut seafront, men, women and children were seen holding hands, some carrying Lebanese flags and many singing the national anthem. | |
Another organiser in the capital, who asked to be called a daughter of Beirut, said: “The idea is that from the north to the south, we are united and making a stand together. | |
“We are one people and we love each other,” she added, in between coordinating events by phone. | |
On the main motorway north-east of Beirut, dozens were seen standing along a stretch of highway under a rocky hillside covered in bushes. | |
In the southern city of Tyre, protesters standing in a line held the edges of a long Lebanese flag, local television showed. | |
The protests have been remarkable for their territorial reach and the absence of political or sectarian banners in a country often defined by its divisions. | The protests have been remarkable for their territorial reach and the absence of political or sectarian banners in a country often defined by its divisions. |
The leaderless protest movement, driven mostly by those born after the 1975-1990 civil war, has been described by some as the birth of a Lebanese civic identity. | |
The army has sought to reopen main roads across the country, where schools and banks have been closed for more than a week. | |
In one of the most serious incidents, the army opened fire on Friday to confront a group of protesters blocking a road in Tripoli, injuring at least six people. | In one of the most serious incidents, the army opened fire on Friday to confront a group of protesters blocking a road in Tripoli, injuring at least six people. |
But the protest movement has been relatively incident-free, despite tensions with the armed forces and attempts by party loyalists to stage counterdemonstrations. | |
Protesters have been demanding the removal of the entire ruling class, which has remained largely unchanged in three decades. | |
Many of the political heavyweights are former warlords seen as representing little beyond their own sectarian or geographical community. | |
The protesters see them as corrupt and incompetent and have so far dismissed measures proposed by the political leadership to quell the protests. | The protesters see them as corrupt and incompetent and have so far dismissed measures proposed by the political leadership to quell the protests. |
Elie, a demonstrator walking in central Beirut on Sunday morning carrying a Lebanese flag, said: “We’ve had the same people in charge for 30 years.” | |
The prime minister, Saad Hariri, announced a package of economic changes that aims to revive an economy that has been on the brink of collapse for months. | |
His coalition partners have supported the move and warned a political vacuum in times of economic peril risks chaos. | |
But protesters have accused the political elite of desperately attempting to save their jobs and have stuck to their demands for deep, systemic change. | |
In a now well-established routine, entire families of volunteers showed up early at the main protest sites on Sunday to clean up after another night of protests and parties. | |
After dusk, the central Martyrs’ Square in Beirut and other protest hubs in Lebanon turn into a vast open ground where protesters dance, sing and organise political meetings. | |
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