Lebanese Protesters Block Roads to Protest Crisis

A protester smokes a cigarette in front of burned tires at a main highway that leads to Beirut's international airport, during a protest against the increase in prices of consumer goods, and the crash of the local currency, in Beirut, Lebanon, Monday, Nov. 29, 2021. (AP Photo/Hussein Malla)
A protester smokes a cigarette in front of burned tires at a main highway that leads to Beirut's international airport, during a protest against the increase in prices of consumer goods, and the crash of the local currency, in Beirut, Lebanon, Monday, Nov. 29, 2021. (AP Photo/Hussein Malla)
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Lebanese Protesters Block Roads to Protest Crisis

A protester smokes a cigarette in front of burned tires at a main highway that leads to Beirut's international airport, during a protest against the increase in prices of consumer goods, and the crash of the local currency, in Beirut, Lebanon, Monday, Nov. 29, 2021. (AP Photo/Hussein Malla)
A protester smokes a cigarette in front of burned tires at a main highway that leads to Beirut's international airport, during a protest against the increase in prices of consumer goods, and the crash of the local currency, in Beirut, Lebanon, Monday, Nov. 29, 2021. (AP Photo/Hussein Malla)

Demonstrators, some of them burning tires, blocked roads across parts of Lebanon on Monday in protest at the country's economic meltdown and the increase in prices of consumer goods, days after the Lebanese pound sank to new lows.

Roads were blocked by burning tires in central Beirut, Tripoli in northern Lebanon and the southern city of Sidon.

Lebanon's economic crisis, which erupted in 2019, has propelled more than three quarters of the population into poverty and the local currency has plummeted by over 90%.

The Lebanese pound sank to more than 25,000 against the dollar last week, from a peg in 2019 of 1,500.

There has been little progress since Prime Minister Najib Mikati's government was appointed in September after more than a year of political deadlock that compounded the crisis.

Mikati's government has been in paralysis since a row over the lead investigator into a fatal explosion at Beirut port last year flared during a cabinet meeting on Oct. 12. The cabinet has not met since then.

Subsidies have been cut back on almost all goods including fuel and medicine, pushing up prices as basic services such as healthcare crumble.

The cabinet's main focus was on a revival of talks with the International Monetary Fund, needed to unlock foreign aid. But an agreement on vital financial figures, a requirement to start negotiations, has not been reached.



Syrians Protest to Demand Answers about Loved Ones Who Disappeared under Assad’s Rule

Wafaa Mustafa, center, holds a picture of her missing father during a demonstration in Damascus, Syria, Friday, Dec. 2024. (AP)
Wafaa Mustafa, center, holds a picture of her missing father during a demonstration in Damascus, Syria, Friday, Dec. 2024. (AP)
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Syrians Protest to Demand Answers about Loved Ones Who Disappeared under Assad’s Rule

Wafaa Mustafa, center, holds a picture of her missing father during a demonstration in Damascus, Syria, Friday, Dec. 2024. (AP)
Wafaa Mustafa, center, holds a picture of her missing father during a demonstration in Damascus, Syria, Friday, Dec. 2024. (AP)

Dozens of relatives of missing Syrians gathered Friday in Damascus to demand answers about the fate of their loved ones, as many Syrians have been missing for years, some disappearing after being detained by the now-toppled government of Bashar al-Assad.

The gathering comes nearly three weeks after the opposition freed dozens of people from Syrian prisons following the fall of Assad’s government. Since then, no additional detainees have been found, leaving thousands of families still in anguish over the fate of their missing relatives.

Relatives have been traveling across Syria in search of information.

“We accept nothing less than knowing all details related to what happened to them,” said Wafa Mustafa, whose father, Ali Mustafa, has been missing for over a decade.

“Who is responsible for their detention? Who tortured them? If they were killed, who killed them? Where were they buried?” Mustafa said, speaking at the gathering held at Al-Hijaz Station in Damascus.

In 2023, the United Nations established an independent body to investigate the fate of more than 130,000 people missing during the Syrian conflict.

Marah Allawi, whose son Huzaifa was detained in 2012 at the age of 18, said she saw “how they tortured young men, how they put them in cages and tortured them.”

She called on the international community to act. “I call on the whole world to know where our sons are.”