A Hezbollah supporter, right, clashes with an anti-government protester, left, during a protest in Beirut, Lebanon, Oct. 29, 2019. (AP/Bilal Hussein)
The violence comes on the 13th day of Lebanon’s anti-government protests, which have been an unprecedented expression of anger that’s united millions of Lebanese.
By AP and World Israel News Staff
Hundreds of Lebanese supporters of the terrorist Hezbollah group, some wielding sticks, attacked a protest camp set up by anti-government demonstrators in central Beirut, burning some of its tents and dismantling others Tuesday.
The violence came shortly after dozens of other Hezbollah supporters, also wielding sticks, attacked a roadblock set up by the protesters on a main thoroughfare in the capital.
The violence comes on the 13th day of Lebanon’s anti-government protests, which have been an unprecedented expression of anger that’s united millions of Lebanese against what demonstrators say is a corrupt and inefficient political class in power for decades since the 1975-1990 civil war.
But in recent days, Hezbollah leader Hassan Nasrallah grew critical of the protests, claiming they have been backed and financed by foreign powers and rival political groups. He called on his supporters to leave the rallies and urged the protesters on Friday to remove the roadblocks. The mass rallies have paralyzed a country already grappling with a severe fiscal crisis.
Hezbollah, along with allies, dominates the current government and is the country’s most powerful organization, building its credibility on its resistance to the security zone previously carved out by Israel in southern Lebanon to counter cross-border attacks into the Jewish State, though Israel pulled out of Lebanon and disbanded the zone in 2000.
The riot police and military first moved in Tuesday trying to separate the rival Lebanese groups, but the security forces failed to stop the storming of Martyrs Square, where anti-government protesters have held their ground since Oct. 17.
The protesters are calling on the government to step down, holding rallies in public squares and promoting a civil disobedience campaign that includes blocking main roads.
At the Beirut roadblock, the angry crowd swelled by early afternoon, some using sticks to chase protesters away. Some of the men also attacked journalists, kicking them and attempting to smash their cameras.
Many among the angry mob chanted: “God, Nasrallah, and the whole Dahiyeh,” in reference to the southern suburb of Beirut that is a stronghold of the Iranian-backed terror organization. Others told TV crews that they were upset at the roadblocks and insults to their leader.
Then they marched to the central square, tearing down tents, smashing plastic chairs, and using metal poles to poke holes in the tents, which they later burned. They also beat some anti-government protesters. One TV presenter described it as “a war scene.”
In his speech on Friday, Nasrallah evoked the specter of a new civil war like the one that ended in 1990, saying “someone is trying to pull it … toward a civil war.”
It was seen as a precursor to the confrontation on Tuesday.
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