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| A Baghdad street vendor sells flags of Iraq and Lebanon, both gripped by anti-government protests |
A Lebanese flag flutters in the protest-hit Iraqi capital. More than 900 kilometres (500 miles) away, a revolutionary Iraqi chant rings out from a bustling protest square in Beirut.
"Don't
trust the rumours, they're a group of thieves," sings a group of Lebanese
musicians in Iraqi dialect, referring to political leaders they deem
incompetent and corrupt.
"The
identity is Lebanese," they continue, reworking the chant by Iraqi
preacher Ali Yusef al-Karbalai, made popular during the street movement there.
Such recent
shows of solidarity have become a common feature of protest squares in the two
countries, where corruption, unemployment and appalling public services have
fuelled unprecedented street movements demanding the ouster of an entire
political class.
They serve
to "shed light on similarities between the two movements and boost
morale", said Farah Qadour, a Lebanese oud musician.
"The
two streets are observing and learning from each other," said the
26-year-old who is part of the group that adopted al-Karbalai's chant.
In
Lebanon's southern city of Nabatiyeh, hundreds brandishing Lebanese flags
chanted: "From Iraq to Beirut, one revolution that never dies."
And in the
northern city of Tripoli, dubbed the "bride" of Lebanon's protest
movement, a man standing on a podium waved a wooden pole bearing the flags of
the two countries.
"From
Lebanon to Iraq, our pain is one, our right is one, and victory is near,"
read a sign raised during another protest, outside Beirut's state-run
electricity company.
'We're
with you'
In Tahrir
Square, the beating heart of Baghdad's month-old protest movement,
demonstrators are selling Lebanese flags alongside Iraqi ones.
They have
hung some on the abandoned Turkish restaurant, turned by Iraqi demonstrators
into a protest control tower.
Banners
reading "from Beirut to Baghdad, one revolution against the corrupt"
could be seen throughout.
Lebanon and
Iraq are ranked amongst the most corrupt countries in the region by anti-graft
watchdog Transparency International, with Iraq listed as the 12th most corrupt
in the world.
Public debt
levels in both countries are relatively high, with the rate in Lebanon
exceeding 150 percent of gross domestic product (GDP).
"What's
happening on the streets in Iraq and Lebanon, they're sister protests,"
said Samah, a 28-year-old Lebanese demonstrator.
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Iraqi
protesters stand under a banner reading "From Karbala to Beirut, one
goal,
one trench"
|
"They're
the result of an accumulation" of years of problems.
One video
that went viral on social media networks showed a masked Iraqi protester
dressed in military fatigues demanding the resignation of Lebanese Foreign
Minister Gebran Bassil, one of the main targets of protesters in the small
Mediterranean country.
In a video
released online, a group of young Iraqi men had filmed themselves singing,
"Lebanon, we're with you!"
The two
movements also seem to be adopting similar protest strategies.
In both
countries, rows of parked vehicles have blocked traffic along main
thoroughfares in recent weeks.
University-aged
demonstrators wearing medical masks or eye goggles have occupied bridges and
flyovers, refusing to believe pledges of reform from both governments.
'The goal
is one'
The big
difference is that in Iraq, the demonstrations have turned deadly, with more
than 300 people, mostly protesters but also including security forces, killed
since the movement started October 1.
Lebanon's
street movement, which started on October 17, has been largely incident-free
despite scuffles with security forces and counter-demonstrators rallying in
support of established parties.
The two
movements, however, are united in their anger about the kind of political
system that prioritises power-sharing between sects over good governance.
The
consecutive governments born out of this system have been prone to deadlock and
have failed to meet popular demands for better living conditions.
"We
are united by a sense of patriotic duty in confronting this sectarian political
system," said Obeida, a 29-year-old protester from Tripoli.
He said he
had high hopes for Iraqi protesters because the sectarian power-sharing system
there is relatively new, having emerged after the fall of Saddam Hussein in
2003.
"In
Lebanon, it's more entrenched," he said of the arrangement that ended the
country's 1975-1990 civil war.
On a Beirut
waterfront, dotted with luxury restaurants and cafes, a 70-year-old Iraqi man
who has been living in Lebanon for five years looked on as demonstrators laid
out picnic blankets on the grass.
With a
Lebanese flag wrapped around his neck, Fawzi said the protests looked different
but reminded him of those back home.
"The
goal is one," he said.


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