Lebanese protest despite government's economic rescue plan

Lebanese protest despite government's economic rescue plan

SeattlePI.com

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BEIRUT (AP) — Hundreds of Lebanese rallied Friday outside the central bank in Beirut and in elsewhere in the country, a day after the prime minister said he will seek a rescue program from the International Monetary Fund to deal with a spiraling economic and financial crisis.

The protesters decried the authorities for their handling of the unprecedented crisis that saw the local currency crash, devastate their savings and send prices and inflation soaring. Scuffles broke out outside a private bank and troops were seen beating and pulling away at least one protester.

The government “is not even providing the most basic needs," said a protester in Beirut, Ahmad Demashqia. There were also rallies in northern and southern Lebanon to commemorated May Day, the international Labor Day.

Lebanese Prime Minister Hassan Diab, who on Friday signed the official request for assistance from IMF, said the government has taken “the first step on the path to saving Lebanon from the deep financial pit" On Thursday, the Cabinet adopted a long-awaited rescue plan.

But the protesters seemed skeptical. In the southern city of Sidon, 19-year-old Omar al-Mughrabi said the country needs radical change — not reform of failing or ineffective policies.

“Going to the IMF is not the solution," al-Mughrab said “We don't need any more debts than we already have.”

Lebanon, one of the most indebted nations in the world, defaulted for the first time in March on its sovereign debt. Anti-government protests that erupted in October subsided during a nationwide lockdown since mid-March to blunt the spread of the coronavirus. Lebanon, a country of 5 million people, has reported only 729 cases and 24 deaths, and began to ease some virus restrictions this week.

Many, but not all, of the...

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