Concrete barriers being removed from around Lebanon’s parliament

Last updated on May 25th, 2022 at 03:49 am

In the light of rising protests in Beirut in 2019 against rising corruption and collapsing economy, Parliament of Lebanon was barricaded with concrete to avoid any access. The idea was to protect the country’s ruling class from rising protests nationwide. Now the authorities have ordered to remove the barriers from around Parliament in Beirut.

Also Read: 10 Best Places for Summer Vacations in Turkey

The timing

The order to remove concrete barriers comes after parliamentary elections in Lebanon took place on May 15. The elected members include 13 independent opposition MPs out of 128 seat Parliament.

Interestingly, many of these independent MPs have been linked to the 2019 protests across Lebanon. These members, who will be entering Parliament for the first time, have been an active voice advocating removal of these barriers on previous occasions. “There are no walls that rise between the representatives of the nation and citizens,” newly elected MP Elias Jradi tweeted on Monday morning.

Welcomed decision

The decision for removal of concrete came in late Monday afternoon and was finished late on Tuesday morning. As the work for removal of blocks started on Monday, a small crowd gathered waving Lebanese flags and chanted slogans.

Calling it his duty after elections, Interior Minister Bassam Mawlawi said, “The people who are protesting here are now inside.” He added, “Some of them are in the Parliament”.

Beirut MP Ibrahim Mneimneh, from the Forces of Change, said, “There is no need for the barriers placed around the people’s house because it is for the people. They are needless barriers.”

Also Read: Tokyo Revengers: Each Main Character, Ranked By Strength

Ali Hamdan, the media adviser to the parliamentary speaker, said that “these measures are not an indication of excessive confidence. Rather, elections were held and the results have brought representatives of the protesters to parliament.” He said, “These people represent part of the street, and you may call them a movement, an uprising or a change.”

Desk Writer

Human stories, politics, diplomatic developments, climate and daily updates – all are assured to be at your access as we strive to bring the best news to you.

Recent Posts

Asha Sharma on Xbox’s Next-Gen Plans and Game Pass Future: Biggest Change in Gaming Industry? ‘What Every Gamer Must Know’

Xbox's new CEO Asha Sharma is guiding the gaming company through its biggest change so far. She is combining next-gen… Read More

April 25, 2026

MacBook Ultra Touchscreen Rumors Grow as Apple Reportedly Plans Major Shift

For years, the idea of a touchscreen MacBook felt almost forbidden. Apple resisted it, defended that decision, and even mocked… Read More

April 25, 2026

Petro in Caracas: Colombia Becomes First to Recognize New Venezuela Government

In a moment that could reshape politics across Latin America, Colombia’s president Gustavo Petro arrived in Caracas this week, becoming… Read More

April 25, 2026

NASA’s 2028 Moon Mission in Doubt as Budget Cuts Open Door to Private Space Dominance

The idea of astronauts walking on the Moon again has long captured public imagination. But now, that vision is facing… Read More

April 25, 2026

Firing Squads Return to US Execution Debate as Justice Department Signals Policy Shift

The idea sounds like something pulled from a history book, not a modern policy memo. Yet in a move that… Read More

April 25, 2026

Russia Ukraine Prisoner Swap 2026: UAE Mediates Release of 386 Prisoners in Historic Exchange

When a situation is marked by stagnation and suspicion, even the slightest step forward counts for much..Such an occasion has… Read More

April 25, 2026

This website uses cookies.

Read More