- Title: Young, angry Lebanese ditch their differences to target 'unjust' system
- Date: 23rd October 2019
- Summary: BEIRUT, LEBANON (OCTOBER 22, 2019) (REUTERS) PROTESTERS WAVING FLAGS NEAR GOVERNMENT BUILDING ACTIVIST NINA SABBAH SPEAKING WITH FRIEND DURING PROTEST SABBAH WRITING MESSAGE READING (Arabic): ''A SECULAR STATE, NO TO THE COVER OF RELIGIONS.'' SABBAH LEAVING MESSAGE ON BARBED WIRE IN FRONT OF GOVERNMENT HEADQUARTERS MESSAGE ON BARBED WIRE (SOUNDBITE) (Arabic) ACTIVIST, NINA SABBAH, SAYING: "I am protesting because I want to rise up, because we want a secular state that can realise our demands and achieve our rights which include custody rights (for children of divorced or deceased parents), employment, education, and the right to speak your mind without fear.'" VARIOUS OF SABBAH STANDING WITH FRIEND AND OTHER PROTESTERS (SOUNDBITE) (Arabic) ACTIVIST, NINA SABBAH, SAYING: ''The sectarian system has been causing us a lot of problems, lots of complications, it was creating this blockade of fear but our stance now on the ground has managed to break this fear.''
- Embargoed: 6th November 2019 12:18
- Keywords: economy anti-government protests morning protests Tripoli politics Sidon Beirut Lebanon
- Location: BEIRUT, LEBANON
- City: BEIRUT, LEBANON
- Country: Lebanon
- Topics: Conflicts/War/Peace,Civil Unrest,Editors' Choice
- Reuters ID: LVA001B2BIQ87
- Aspect Ratio: 16:9
- Story Text: Like most young protesters flooding Lebanon's streets to vent their fury over joblessness and inequality, Nina Sabbah demands more than the government's hasty reforms if she is to back down.
She wants to end a political system where, she says, what job you get depends on who you know and what religion or sect you belong to.
Demonstrations dominated by young faces have paralysed the country in recent days, forcing Prime Minister Saad al-Hariri's government to announce measures aimed at quelling anger and rescuing an economy in free fall.
Protesters like Sabbah, a Shi'ite Muslim from the south, say they have shed religious affiliations to join a broad protest movement that has cut across sectarian lines, challenging a system they say fuels inequality, nepotism, and corruption.
Lebanon's power-sharing system based on 18 recognised religious sects dates back to French colonial rule, allocating posts for each of the country's communities and forming the basis of its major political parties.
Some people say their fight is to erase the legacy of a 15-year civil war that began in 1975 and pitted Muslims, Druze, and Christians against one another.
As tens of thousands of demonstrators hoisting the Lebanese flag fanned out across Lebanon, activists have urged protesters to leave sectarian symbols and party flags at home.
Like most Arab countries, the demographics of Lebanon's roughly 4 million skew heavily toward the young: about 40% of its highly educated population is under the age of 25.
(Production: Imad Creidi, Yara Abi Nader, Ayat Basma) - Copyright Holder: REUTERS
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