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Lebanese protests, politics resume with a new, virus twist
Published in Ahram Online on 21 - 04 - 2020

Lebanese lawmakers convened Tuesday at a cavernous Beirut theater so that parliament members can observe social distancing measures imposed over the coronavirus pandemic. Anti-government demonstrators meanwhile, also obeyed the health safety measures _ driving around the city in their cars to protest the country's spiraling economic and political crisis.
As lawmakers wearing face masks arrived at the theater, known as the UNESCO palace, white uniformed paramedics sprayed them with disinfectant before they filed in one at a time through the gate.
The staggered, three-day session is the first by parliament since Lebanon imposed a lockdown more than a month ago to limit the spread of the virus and after meetings that were scheduled last month were postponed. The novel coronavirus has infected at least 677 people and killed 21 in Lebanon.
On the lawmakers' agenda are dozens of laws, including fighting corruption in the country's bloated public sector, a controversial draft about general amnesty, restoring looted public funds and allowing the plantation of cannabis for medial use.
To coincide with the session, hundreds of protesters drove around Beirut in cars in a show of rejection for the political leadership that they blame for the crisis roiling the country.
Lebanon has been facing its worst economic crisis in decades, with unemployment figures soaring and the local currency losing more than half of its value against the dollar. Protests broke out nationwide in October against government corruption, further deepening the economic slump.
Over the past months, the protests lost some of their momentum and were subsequently interrupted by the outbreak or the pandemic. Activists, however, said they were resuming the movement but would protest inside their cars, in line with safety measures.
Some of the protesters wore masks with Lebanon's red and white flag with a green cedar tree.
``We are here to tell them that the revolution will stay, the revolution will not die,'' said Hassan Makahal, a protester. ``We are going back to the streets and stronger than before.''
Meanwhile, in Afghanistan, where more than 20 staff at the presidential palace have tested positive for COVID-19, the illness caused by the novel coronavirus, a spokesman said on Tuesday that Afghan President Ashraf Ghani and his wife Rula have both tested negative.
Presidential spokesman Sediq Sediqqi tweeted that Ghani, who is 70 and a cancer survivor, and his wife had both requested the test. ``The President is healthy and is leading government efforts on all fronts. All precautions are in place to make sure his work environment is safe and healthy,'' he tweeted.
Afghanistan has confirmed 1,092 cases of the virus, with 36 deaths so far, but testing has been sporadic and there are widespread concerns an explosion of COVID-19 would overwhelm the country's war-ravaged health system. More than 200,000 Afghans had returned from Iran _ the region's epicenter of the virus _ since the beginning of the year. The returnees were not quarantined but dispersed after crossing the border to travel to their hometowns across the country.
Iran is the hardest-hit country in the region with more than 83,500 cases and more than 5,200 deaths.
In neighboring Pakistan, the family of Faisal Edhi who heads the country's top charity, the Edhi Foundation, said he tested positive for coronavirus just days after attending an April 15 meeting with Prime Minister Imran Khan on a government fund for helping the poor through the pandemic.
The prime minister's physician, Faisal Sultan, said he would advise Khan to get tested protectively.


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