Lebanese govt wins no confidence vote despite protests

Lebanon's new cabinet won a vote of confidence in parliament on Tuesday based in part on a financial rescue plan it put forward for grappling with a deep financial crisis.

Parliament Speaker Nabih Berri congratulated Lebanese lawmakers who sat through an eight-hour session before holding a vote that saw 63 out of 84 MPs present give their confidence to the new government.



Speaking just before the vote, Prime Minister Hassan Diab said his government's priority was preserving foreign currency needed for critical imports and that all options for dealing with Eurobonds maturing this year were being studied.



Reporting from the capital, Beirut, Leila Molana-Allen said the all-day session began with Diab “laying out the Cabinet statement and their plans, saying they were going to tackle corruption…[that] they were going to figure out plans to help the poorest in society, they were going to back local industry, local commerce”, she explained.

Diab also said he would have to implement “painful” measures to revive the economy. Lebanon has one of the highest debt ratios in the world, standing at more than 150 percent of GDP and worsening over recent years with no economic growth and high unemployment. 



The prime minister said his Cabinet was “going to abide by the austerity measures that international donors have said they have to enact in order to access the $11 billion potential funds for Lebanon. Many Lebanese here feel they cannot face any more austerity, they’re already in a dire situation,” explained Molana-Allen.



The international community has pledged more than $11 billion in desperately needed financial aid, but made it conditional on the speedy implementation of economic reforms.

Protesters clash with police outside parliament



Earlier Tuesday, protesters clashed outside the parliament building with security forces who used teargas and water cannon to disperse them.



The Red Cross said a total of 373 people were treated for teargas exposure and other injuries, including 45 who were hospitalised.

Diab, a little-known academic and former education minister, was tasked with forming a government in December after mass rallies against official corruption and economic woes forced premier Saad Hariri to resign.



But more than three months on, angry demonstrators charge that the new cabinet fails to address their demands and won't be able to rescue Lebanon's ailing economy.



Before the session started in an area cordoned off by riot police and soldiers, protesters mobbed and threw water bottles at the tinted-glass vehicles of lawmakers in a bid to stop them reaching parliament.



But enough lawmakers reached the chamber to make the vote valid. One member of parliament turned up with a black eye, following a brief trip to hospital after he was wounded trying to reach the chamber.



Human Rights Watch condemned the use of force against demonstrators.



"Security forces were throwing tear gas and beating people," said Aya Majzoub, Lebanon researcher at Human Rights Watch.    (FRANCE 24/AFP/REUTERS)