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Asharq Al-Awsat
Asharq Al-Awsat
World
Beirut- Asharq Al-Awsat

Lebanon's Aoun to Chair Crisis Talks After Weekend Violence

Clashes between Lebanese anti-government protesters and riot police wounded hundreds of people over the weekend | AFP

Lebanon's under-fire president is set to meet Monday with top security officials to discuss rare violence over the weekend that left hundreds wounded in the protest-hit country.

Michel Aoun will be joined by the care-taker ministers of the interior and defense as well as the chiefs of the military and security agencies in the early afternoon, his office said in a statement.

The meeting will touch on "security developments" in a country rocked since October 17 by unprecedented protests against a political class deemed incompetent, corrupt, and responsible for an ever-deepening economic crisis.

It will also address "measures that need to be taken to preserve peace and stability," the state-run National News Agency (NNA) reported.

Demonstrators at the weekend lobbed stones, firecrackers, and street signs at riot police, who fired tear gas and rubber bullets to clear a flashpoint road near parliament.

Over the most violent weekend in three months of street protests, some 530 were wounded on both sides, according to a toll compiled by AFP from figures provided by the Red Cross and Civil Defence.

Lawyers and rights groups have condemned the "excessive" and "brutal" use of force by security forces.

Human Rights Watch accused riot police of "launching tear gas canisters at protesters' heads, firing rubber bullets in their eyes, and attacking people at hospitals and a mosque".

Internal Security Forces, for their part, have urged demonstrators to abstain from assaulting riot police and damaging public or private property.

Protesters had called for a week of "anger" over the political leadership's failure to form a new government even as the debt-ridden country sinks deeper into a financial crisis.

Lebanon has been without a government since outgoing prime minister Saad Hariri resigned on October 29 in the face of popular pressure.

Political factions agreed on December 19 to appoint former education minister Hassan Diab as the new premier but have since squabbled over ministerial posts and portfolios.

Protesters have demanded a new government be comprised solely of independent experts, and exclude all established political parties.

The United Nations' envoy to Lebanon pinned the blame for the violence on politicians.

"Anger of the people is understandable, but it is different from vandalism of political manipulators, that must be stopped," Jan Kubis wrote on Twitter on Saturday.

Interior Minister Raya al-Hassan said people had the right to protest but it was unacceptable to “blatantly assault” security forces.

Diab, who was designated prime minister with the backing of Hezbollah and its allies last month, met with Aoun on Sunday. He left without commenting as a cabinet deal remained elusive.

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