Does the LGBTQ+ community in Lebanon trust healthcare providers? Do future doctors accept queer patients?
JoinedJanuary 29, 2018
Articles106
Laudy Issa is a multimedia journalist and editor. She was previously the Managing Editor of Beirut Today.
Professors at the Lebanese University are on strike, demanding their rights from the government but putting the futures of students at risk. Students react:
The secret services of the world probably never had to hide evidence of extraterrestrial life because if the aliens came...
Women in Lebanon are angry, and rightfully so. Nationality, criminal, personal status, and labour laws do not provide for gender...
Breaking down which beaches to go to and to avoid this summer in Lebanon, according to new research from the National Center for Marine Sciences.
France-based Camp Claude’s Diane Sagnier talks about Beirut and her electropop music in a round of Quickfire Questions at Beirut...
Ilvy grip and hook their listeners with a consistently surprising "wall of sound" that ranges from heavy instrumentals to light ambient sounds.
Students want to transform Beirut River into a shared, open space. At the heart of it all? A functional, translucent tube and a green tower.
We sat down with the co-founders of Beirut Jam Sessions for their seventh year anniversary.
For over a hundred years, women have willingly put up with the ridicule, the belittling, and the pushback from the public to advocate for women’s rights in Lebanon. And they had previously been forgotten.
The Grand Sofar Hotel once stood as one of the greatest hotels in the region. Looted and abandoned for 43 years because of the Lebanese Civil War, it now returns as a cultural space.
The lack of a proper waste management framework and monitoring process leaves room for the illegitimate private gain of authorities in charge of costly waste incinerator projects.