A man died of his wounds Thursday in Lebanon after clashes for a third consecutive day between security forces and protesters angered by the severe economic crisis and a coronavirus lockdown.
Omar Tayba sustained a bullet wound late Wednesday when protests in the northern city of Tripoli turned violent, his brother Ahmad told AFP.
"My brother was in Tripoli watching the protests when he was hit," he said. "He was transferred to hospital and died this morning.
The 29-year-old man, who was employed in a bakery, became the first fatality -- reported also by local media -- of the protests that erupted earlier this week in Tripoli.
According to the National News Agency, a total of 226 people received treatment Wednesday night.
The violence marked a sharp escalation in confrontations in Tripoli that began on Monday and continued for three straight days into Wednesday night. The city is the second largest in Lebanon, and the most impoverished.
But the coronavirus pandemic has piled new misery onto a chronic economic crisis.
Many of Tripoli’s residents have been left without an income since Lebanon imposed a full lockdown earlier this month in a bid to stem a surge in Covid-19 cases and prevent its hospitals from being overwhelmed.
A round-the-clock curfew is in force nationwide and grocery shopping is restricted to home deliveries -- a service that is often unavailable in poorer areas.
Authorities have extended the lockdown by two weeks to February 8.