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Hundreds of Lebanese resume anti-government protests as lockdown eased

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Hundreds of Lebanese resume anti-government protests as lockdown eased

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Demonstrators gather as they hold Lebanese flags during a protest against the government performance and worsening economic conditions, in Beirut, Lebanon June 6, 2020. REUTERS/Aziz Taher

BEIRUT (Reuters) – Several hundred Lebanese protestors took to the streets on Saturday, with some throwing stones and demanding the government resign over its handling of a deep economic crisis as hardship increases.

The demonstrators, many wearing face masks and carrying the national flag, converged on a main square in Beirut that was an epicenter for protests last year but which has been mainly quiet over recent months in part due to the coronavirus lockdown.

With most of the virus curbs now lifted and economic conditions worsening, they resumed protests with calls for the five-month-old government to resign and for early parliamentary elections to be held.

Others demanded that the powerful Shi’ite paramilitary group Hezbollah be disarmed.

Some protesters threw rocks at security forces and smashed storefronts in downtown Beirut’s upscale shopping district, prompting security forces to fire tear gas, footage from Lebanese broadcasters showed.

Prime Minister Hassan Diab took office in January with the support of the Iran-backed Hezbollah and its allies after the previous government was toppled by the protests.

Diab’s government is in talks with the International Monetary Fund for an economic reform programmer’s it hopes will secure billions of dollars in financing and spark a recovery.

Lebanon’s long-brewing financial crisis burst into the open last October, with mass protests erupting against the elite as a dollar crunch prompted banks to impose strict capital controls.

The situation has grown dire since then. The pound currency has lost more than half of its value on the parallel market, prices have soared, and companies dealing with the double blow of the coronavirus have axed jobs.

Reporting by Reuters TV; Writing by Eric Knecht; Editing by Helen Popper

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