Despite losing the job that sustains his dog shelter, Hussein Hamza is still finding ways to love and feed almost 350 dogs in South Lebanon.
JoinedOctober 9, 2020
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Karem Monzer is a journalist, filmmaker, and artistic activist. He holds a BA in Communication Arts and MA in migration, using his degrees for documentary production and cinematography, scriptwriting, editing, and content creation. Through his work at Beirut Today, he seeks to peel the layers of communal struggle and delineate truths with imaginative and current affairs reporting.
Beirut is notorious for having both little-to-no green spaces and a distressing trash crisis. GROBeirut is changing that.
Inside hospitals, frontliners are overwhelmed as COVID-19 cases spike. And on the streets, people are hungry.
The most recent blow to migrant workers in Lebanon came from the State Shura Council, which rejected a new unified...
At midnight, the World Bank’s September 4 deadline for the Lebanese government to meet “the tasks that are preconditions to...
Lebanon's overlapping crises have driven a new wave of illegal immigration via smugglers' boats. On the streets, both young and old think of leaving the country in search of better opportunities but do not have the means for it.
“Their existence is legalized, but they are a militia,” says Maher Abou Shackra about Lebanon's parliamentary guards.
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