Lebanese Protestors Barricade Roads, Press Demands for Hariri Resignation

Published October 28th, 2019 - 07:57 GMT
Lebanese protesters block a road with burning tires during ongoing anti-government demonstrations in the southern coastal city of Saida (Sidon) on October 28, 2019. Lebanese demonstrators set up barricades and parked cars across key roads today to protest corruption and press their demands for a radical overhaul of their country's sectarian political system. Defying pleas from Lebanon's top leaders, protesters sought to keep the country on lockdown by cutting off some of the main thoroughfares, including th
Lebanese protesters block a road with burning tires during ongoing anti-government demonstrations in the southern coastal city of Saida (Sidon) on October 28, 2019. Lebanese demonstrators set up barricades and parked cars across key roads today to protest corruption and press their demands for a radical overhaul of their country's sectarian political system. Defying pleas from Lebanon's top leaders, protesters sought to keep the country on lockdown by cutting off some of the main thoroughfares, including the main north-south highway. Mahmoud ZAYYAT / AFP
Highlights
By Monday morning, some major routes were closed off by hundreds of angle-parked vehicles, others by groups of protesters sitting on the road.

Lebanese demonstrators set up barricades and parked cars across key roads Monday to protest corruption and press their demands for the resignation of Prime Minister Saad Hariri’s government.

Defying pleas from Lebanon's top leaders, protesters sought to keep the country paralyzed by cutting off some of the main thoroughfares, including the main north-south highway.

A poster urging motorists to block roads with their cars started circulating on social media on Sunday.

By Monday morning, some major routes were closed off by hundreds of angle-parked vehicles, others by groups of protesters sitting on the road.

The Lebanese security forces had been expected to make a new attempt at reopening the roads as the country faced more paralysis after 11 days of protests.

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The army and the country's top security agencies agreed during talks held at the defense ministry in Yarze on Sunday to a military-led plan to clear roadblocks, but their efforts have been met with resistance from demonstrators.

The unprecedented mobilization was sparked a proposed tax on voice calls via messaging apps, but quickly morphed into a massive grassroots push to drive out the ruling class which has remained virtually unchanged in three decades.

The protesters are demanding the government's resignation, more freedom, better services and an end to corruption and sectarianism, among other things.

Banks, schools and universities remained closed Monday.

This article has been adapted from its original source.    

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