Lebanon protesters try to storm ministry over currency crisis

Protestors in Beirut tried to storm the ministry of finance, angered by the continuing crisis in the country and a lack of political progress.
2 min read
The price of petrol has climbed by around 49 percent since July [Getty]

Lebanese protesters briefly attempted to storm the economy ministry on Wednesday to denounce exploding prices of basic goods as the local currency collapses.

Around 20 protesters had gathered outside the ministry's Beirut headquarters after the Lebanese pound hit a new-low of 15,000 to the greenback a day earlier, according to an AFP correspondent.

Some tried to enter the building, causing tension with security forces, the official National News Agency reported. 

"We are killing each other for a bag of diapers and a carton of milk" one protester told a local TV station.


The political class "have humiliated us," he said, denouncing hikes in consumer prices which rose by almost 146 percent during 2020, according to official statistics.

Lebanon is in the grips of its worst economic crisis since the 1975-1990 civil war. 

The pound, officially pegged at 1,507 to the greenback since 1997, has lost almost 90 percent of its value on the black market.

It was changing hands for around 14,000 to the dollar on Wednesday.

The head of the syndicate of fuel distributers, Fadi Abou Chacra, announced Wednesday a new spike in petrol prices, already rising on global price hikes, NNA reported. 

With the latest increase, the price of petrol has climbed by around 49 percent since July.

Lebanon's crisis is also eating away at the country's dwindling foreign currency reserves which have so far funded subsidies on key goods such as fuel, flour and medicine.

The diminishing funds are cornering the government into cutting such support, which will push more of the population into poverty. 

Read more: As Lebanon's politicians stall, its people suffer hopelessly

Some 55 percent of Lebanese live below the global poverty line of 3.84 dollars a day, the United Nations says.

The country is also facing political deadlock, with no new government agreed some seven months after premier Hassan Diab resigned over an August 4 explosion that killed more than 200 people and disfigured swathes of the capital.

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