Lebanese protesters refuse talks with new prime minister-designate
Debt-burdened Lebanon has been without a fully functioning government since former prime minister Saad Hariri resigned on October 29 in the face of nationwide protests.
Demonstrators are demanding an overhaul of the political establishment which they deem corrupt and inept, insisting on a government of independents and experts with no ties to the country's sectarian parties.
Hassan Diab, an engineering professor who was tasked on Thursday with forming a desperately-needed government, had asked protesters to give him a "chance" to form a cabinet of independent experts within four to six weeks.
But the self-styled technocrat's call for consultations with representatives of the popular movement on Sunday failed to draw prominent street leaders or groups.
A small crowd of protesters rallied outside Diab's house and slammed visitors who claimed to represent the country's leaderless movement.
"You don't represent us," the protesters chanted.
The few who heeded Diab's calls for talks included largely unknown individuals not recognised as representatives of the protest movement.
Comment: In Lebanon, revolution soothes a depressed nation
"Not a single group actually active on the ground met today with the prime minister-designate because they are not convinced" he can form a government of technocrats, said Wassef Harakeh, a prominent activist.
"They want us to get mired in this game of consultations," he told AFP.
In the protest camp in central Beirut, crowds began gathering in the afternoon.
"The people that visited the prime minister-designate today do not represent the revolution," said Ali Haidar, a resident of Beirut's southern suburbs.
"These talks were a failure," he told AFP from the protest camp.
Diab held talks on Saturday with parliamentary blocs on the formation of a government but met several challenges as key groups insisted that the cabinet must include established parties not just independent experts.
The complicated process of forming a government comes as Lebanon faces its worst economic crisis since the 1975-1990 civil war.
The Lebanese pound, officially pegged to the US dollar, has lost around 30 percent of its value on the black market, while companies have been paying half-salaries for the past two months and laying off staff.