********************  POSTING RULES & NOTES  ********************
#1 YOU MUST clip all extraneous text when replying to a message.
#2 This mail-list, like most, is publicly & permanently archived.
#3 Subscribe and post under an alias if #2 is a concern.
*****************************************************************


Lebanon’s ‘October Revolution’ must go on!
Lebanon has a golden opportunity for the formation of an alternative, we should 
not let the ruling class reproduce itself again.
Rima Majed
20 October 2019


The ‘streets’ of Lebanon have exploded in massive protests since October 17th. 
Following months of austerity and dire economic conditions, a shortage of US 
dollars that caused a serious threat of devaluation of the Lebanese currency 
resulting in a potential crisis of gasoline and bread, the continuing power and 
water outages, and a catastrophic week with wildfires ravaging the country and 
exposing the ruling class, the government met on Thursday and agreed to impose 
new taxes on the people, including a tax on Whatsapp calls! While the uprising 
is not merely caused by the Whatsapp tax specifically, the newly agreed upon 
taxes (later reversed following street pressure) were perceived by most 
Lebanese as a ‘vulgar’ reflection of the government’s total neglect of people’s 
hardship and its priority to protect the interests of the ruling upper class at 
the expense of the majority of the population.

Not completely unexpected, mass protests have ravaged the country. While 
Lebanon has witnessed in its recent history similar massive “street explosions” 
against the ruling class (such as in 2015), the Lebanese ‘October Revolution’ 
of 2019 marks an important turning point in the history of contentious politics 
in the post-civil war era. After almost three decades of neoliberal policies 
that resulted in the deepening of class divides, people have taken to the 
streets this time to clearly denounce the ruling class that stands as the 
guardian of neoliberalism (and its own class interests), beyond sectarian 
divides that are usually an effective tactic deployed by the leaders to divide 
the streets. This time, the revolution started with the poorer classes of 
unemployed or underemployed - usually the backbone and constituencies of the 
hegemonic sectarian parties through complex networks of clientelism – turning 
against their ‘patrons’.

Thousands of ‘motorcycle riders’ mobilized on Thursday evening, following the 
government’s decision to impose new taxes, to block roads with blazing tyres 
and paralyze movement in the capital Beirut. The road blockades quickly spread 
to other regions and people started to gather in squares and roads across the 
country in a show of anger that clearly targeted all the rulers – for the first 
time, without any exception. The initial mobilizations that took the shape of a 
riot have – maybe surprisingly for some – gathered hundreds of thousands around 
them. While the protests of 2015 were led by a group of civil society 
organizations mainly representing the middle classes and rejecting most signs 
of riot or civil disobedience under the banner of protecting the protests from 
“infiltrators”, the recent protests have started specifically with those 
usually (and wrongly in most cases) considered to be the “infiltrators” 
themselves.

Not only is the tactic of protest different from previous movements in terms of 
road blockades and civil disobedience, but the scope of the protest is also 
much wider with regions such as the Beqaa, Tripoli, Nabatiyeh, Tyre and Zouk 
mobilizing in huge numbers, and the lexicon of the chants is clearly different 
with curse words and swearing at politicians forming the bulk of the slogans! 
The resonance of such “osé” chants with the wide majority of protesters in the 
squares, many of whom would have rejected and denounced such slogans a few 
years ago, speaks of an extreme level of anger that can challenge authority and 
morality at once (even amongst the middle classes!). These differences in the 
current movement compared to previous ones are not  details, they reflect 
deeper social transformations that have reached an extreme and that have been 
reflected in the radicalization of the movement. The mobilizations of the past 
few days have shown the start of the emergence of a new class-based alliance 
between the unemployed, underemployed, working classes and middle classes 
against the ruling oligarchy. This is a breakthrough.

Despite attempts by the regime to play the usual card of talking about 
“infiltrators” and the presence of “fifth columns” (which in most cases is no 
other than the regime itself), it is impressive how little resonance this 
discourse has had on protesters so far. This is not to say that such a 
discourse has been completely eliminated and such scenarios have been ruled 
out, but rather to highlight the importance of the newly emerging class-based 
awareness that is focused on targeting the ruling elites rather than dividing 
itself. If this can be sustained and organized in the coming weeks, this will 
probably mark the most important turning point in Lebanon’s post-war history of 
contention.

While the hopes are high and the scenes from the streets are heartwarming, 
three main points are important for the movement to take into account in order 
to push this breakthrough forward:

1. It is crucial to organize. This has already started and it is taking various 
shapes and forms, however the movement still needs to develop its organization 
without shying away from having a leadership. Leaderless movements are 
unsustainable and can rarely propose clear alternatives. They also are not 
accurately ‘leaderless’. Usually, in such cases, an unannounced leadership 
stays behind the scenes and coordinates the movement, however it remains 
unaccountable. Usually, this ‘unannounced leadership’ is the most pre-organized 
groups and the ones that have the most financial means to cover the costs of 
sound systems, transportation, distribution of food and water, etc. However, a 
movement leadership does not need to be extremely hierarchical and traditional 
or completely horizontal and unapparent. The emergence of a trustworthy 
leadership that can represent big sections of the protesters, coordinate at the 
regional levels and highlight the priorities of the transitional period is 
crucial to sustain the movement beyond the street mobilization of the first 
weeks.

Organization is also important beyond the immediacy of the protests now. It is 
time for the opposition in Lebanon to perceive itself as such and for different 
groups to organize based on their social and economic interests and coordinate 
together (which the ruling oligarchy excels at!). It is in times of such street 
explosions that we lament the lack of previous organization and we feel the 
need for having our networks better activated and expanded. Reactivating and 
building new unions, organizing in our workplaces, organizing as unemployed, 
organizing as women, organizing in our neighborhoods, organizing as students, 
etc. are all important forms of organizing that can form the scaffolder of the 
coming period. Some forms of such organization, such as feminist groups and 
student groups, already exist and are amongst the most beautiful aspects of 
this uprising. More of this is needed, and more coordination is crucial amongst 
the various groups and amongst the different regions of the country.

2. Raising clear demands that are revolutionary enough but specific enough. 
There are many demands in the streets, primarily socio-economic of course, but 
the movement has not developed a clear set of demands that can shape a 
desirable and convincing alternative. This is not a call for “pragmatism”, but 
rather a call for progressive demands to take over some of the populist demands 
that have become widespread in the streets. The calls by many protesters for an 
army takeover is amongst the most dangerous demands going around. It is 
unfortunate that we still need to write those lines in 2019 after all that we 
have seen in the Arab region in terms of the consequences of army intervention 
in uprisings. It is also ridiculous to talk of an army take over or a military 
rule in a country where the current president (Michel Aoun) is an ex-army 
commander and the current army commander (Joseph Aoun) is a (far) relative and 
(unvocal) supporter of the president.

This is not to mention that it was specifically the Lebanese army (not only the 
security forces) that unleashed its most violent repression against the 
protesters on Friday evening. How can we trust an army that is defending the 
ruling class and using barbaric violence against protesters? A different, yet 
related, type of populism widespread in the streets is the prevalence of 
Lebanese  nationalism obvious in the flags, the repetition of the national 
anthem (often accompanied with the ‘nazi salute’), and the nationalist songs 
from 2005 that are played most day long from the loud speakers of some groups, 
making the more radical and progressive voices less heard. Sure, it is great 
for the Lebanese people to surpass sectarian divides, but Lebanese nationalism 
is not necessarily the opposite of sectarianism, nor is it usually a 
progressive sign. It is exactly this same nationalist discourse that justifies 
racism against Syrian or Palestinian refugees – a discourse shaped and deployed 
by the very ruling elites people are protesting against (the champion of this 
racist and nationalist discourse being the most cited name in the chants of 
protesters: Minister Gebran Bassil). This is a slippery slope that we should 
not fall into. What mobilized people in their millions is not the lack of unity 
or patriotism, it is rather the lack of justice and socio-economic rights.

Let’s stay focused on that since this is the only common denominator amongst 
the 1.2 million who mobilized so far. Such socio-economic demands can include 
(1) immediately cutting off the salaries of the current and past presidents, 
MPs, ministers, and first rank officers, (2) demanding the Lebanese banks to 
wave the national debt that has eaten up most of the country’s budget in the 
past three decades, (3) imposing progressive taxation, (4) immediately solving 
the cuts in electricity and water (at the expense of the cartels of private 
companies of generators and water suppliers), (4) demanding a sustainable and 
ecological solution for waste management, etc. Other demands at the regional 
levels can emerge related to the specificity of each region in the country. At 
the political level, some protesters are demanding the resignation of the 
government and others are demanding the resignation of the president, while 
many are demanding both at once. While I personally am not convinced that 
resignations will lead to actual change (it is a cosmetic act that can give the 
impression of a victory in the streets while the regime reproduces itself), it 
is important for demands of resignation to be accompanied with demands for 
trials and prosecutions.

We do not want the ruling class to resign and be able to get away with its 
crimes, we want justice! The judges of Lebanon (many of whom have historically 
played a crucial role in protecting the ruling class) have to be held 
accountable and pressured to play their role. An important statement was issued 
on Friday by the Lebanese Judges’ Association siding with the people against 
the ruling class. This should be taken seriously and acted upon.

3. The risk of containment and cooptation is not yet null. While it is true 
that this uprising is spectacular in how the constituencies of political 
parties have turned against their own leaders, the risks of containment and 
cooptation are still there (even if less likely than previously). The ruling 
class has in all its figures adopted the same discourse so far in addressing 
the protesters: “you are right”, “we understand you”, “we feel you”, but 
“beware”! Even the performative move of the Lebanese Forces ministers to hand 
in their resignation to the Prime Minister does not really speak any different 
language. They have all acknowledged being in the wrong, and each is trying to 
contain its street in its own way.

The 72 hours ultimatum that the Prime Minister gave himself (ironically!) 
kicked off with heavy repression in the streets and hundreds of arrests. This 
was followed the next day with a violent attack in the southern city of Tyre on 
peaceful protesters by the militiamen of the Amal party followers. Such is the 
face of the promised changes to come after the 72 hours ultimatum. The hope of 
the ruling class to kill the movement with violence is an old tactic. This 
violence can take the shape of direct security forces or army violence and 
arrests, or it can be indirect state violence through its ‘thugs’ and 
‘militiamen’ (as also seen with the ‘baltagia’ in Egypt or Syria). While this 
might not work fully this time, the regime usually uses violence hand-in-hand 
with its other tool of containment: clientelist networks. Sectarian leaders 
don’t only threaten people in their jobs and social provisions, but they also 
threaten to remove their protection and go after the ones that oppose them 
(especially if they remain in power, as in 2015!). The dismantling of the 
clientelistic networks can only fully happen with the dismantling of the whole 
regime of sectarian consociationalism mixed with neoliberalism.

The revolution has already paid a high price with at least 6 martyrs and 
hundreds of injured in the past three days. Lebanon has a golden opportunity 
for the formation of an alternative, we should not let the ruling class 
reproduce itself again. Lebanon’s October revolution must go on!


https://www.opendemocracy.net/en/north-africa-west-asia/lebanons-october-revolution-must-go-on/
 



_________________________________________________________
Full posting guidelines at: http://www.marxmail.org/sub.htm
Set your options at: 
https://lists.csbs.utah.edu/options/marxism/archive%40mail-archive.com

Reply via email to