Hariri’s resignation
Hezbollah also has little to offer in terms of plans to fix economy, which is one of the most indebted in the world

Hariri’s resignation
Even before the protests, Lebanon was struggling to find fresh sources of funding after financial assistance promised by Saudi Arabia and Qatar failed to arrive. Reports say the government needs to cut spending, raise taxes and introduce anti-corruption measures to release around $11 billion in international aid pledged at a donor conference in Paris in 2018. All such moves have been opposed by Hezbollah, which fears the measures would hurt low-income families that form the largest part of its support-base. But Hezbollah also has little to offer in terms of plans to fix the economy, which is one of the most indebted in the world.
Even before the additional pressure of hosting a large Syrian refugee population, Lebanon had serious priority problems. Almost 30 years after the civil war, development still largely favours the rich, and outside of the lights and glamour of Beirut, poverty is rife.
Published in The Express Tribune, October 31st, 2019.
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