Your weekly roundup of headlines from Lebanon. Here's what you need to know going into Monday, December 14. | Video: Hassan El Horr
With AUB and LAU tuition fees now set to be paid at LL 3,950 per dollar, many students are expected to halt their education.
Lebanese people are living with the mental repercussions of a history of war, an economic crash, a pandemic, and now the Beiut blast.
The holiday season in Lebanon is usually a bustling time of year. The economic crisis has dampened that. We talk to a business owner, the mayor of the Jbeil municipality, and an everyday shopper about this year's Christmas spirit –or lack thereof.
The USJ Secular Club's Taleb campaign won 85 out of 101 seats of the university's student representative council –a first for independents in a country where politics are monopolized by sectarian parties.
Militarization has become central to the dystopian COVID-19 reality, escalating needless violence, jeopardizing lives & undermining liberties.
Although often perceived to be the “only way forward,” politicians know that the crisis-inducing model they are reproducing cannot end well.
Beirut is notorious for having both little-to-no green spaces and a distressing trash crisis. GROBeirut is changing that.
As Lebanon gradually eases its two weeks of national lockdown, the number of COVID-19 cases is still on the rise.
The aid conference for Lebanon will be co-presided by French President Emmanuel Macron and U.N. Secretary-General Antonio Guterres.
Flour donated by Iraq was stored at the Camille Chamoun Sports City Stadium, where it was exposed to air, moisture, water, insects and rats.