As security officials increasingly turn against the people, a police state is slowly taking hold across the country.
JoinedMarch 18, 2019
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Lebanon is looking for over $10 billion from the IMF, but that's an ambitious figure considering international donors' distrust in the government.
Despite not having the same services and quality of education, students are still expected to pay full tuition fees as the economy plummets.
The low numbers of new COVID-19 cases are a good sign, but our healthcare system cannot handle another wave of infections.
The amnesty law has been met with fervent rejection in the streets because it pardons Lebanese people who fled to and collaborated with Israel.
“Ensuring the health of society is a top priority on which the law does not compromise, and it is a social responsibility,” said Interior Minister Mohammed Fahmi.
Every day that the lockdown drags on in Lebanon, women across the country face unknown futures with trepidation and fear.
The International Monetary Fund (IMF) predicted on Tuesday, April 14 that Lebanon’s economy will shrink by 12 percent in 2020...
The freefall of the Lebanese lira in past months has caused a significant increase in the prices of basic goods...
“Lebanese must set aside their differences to tackle the country’s major financial crisis,” said Prime Minister Hassan Diab on Wednesday,...
As the value of the lira plummets and costs of living rise, lockdown is proving to be another economic challenge that people in Lebanon are incapable of overcoming.
Protestors have had to forgo their streets, but have substituted this for art, illustration, writing, Instagram lives and many more.