INDEPENDENT NEWS

Scoop Photo Essay: Uneasy Calm in Central Beirut

Published: Sun 4 Mar 2007 01:31 AM
Scoop Photo Essay: An Uneasy Calm in Central Beirut
By Yasmine Ryan
Politics are everywhere in Beirut. From the city’s west coast to Downtown, the mood is calm but tense. There have been no outbursts of violence for two weeks, but the political deadlock continues…


Scoop Image:
A Lebanese soldier patrols Military Beach.
Click
for big version


Scoop Image:
West coast of Beirut
Click for big version


Scoop Image:
A UN frigate off the west coast.
Click
for big version


Scoop Image:
Remnants of the Summer 2006 War, General de Gaulle Drive.
Click
for big version


Scoop Image:
Posters of assassinated Rafik Hariri, and his son Saad Hariri, current leader of the Future Movement (in Hamra).
Click
for big version


Scoop Image:
An Amal poster in Ain El’Mreisse. Shows Imam Moussa al-Sadr, disappeared spiritual leader of Lebanese Shias, alongside Iran’s Ayatollah Ruhollah Khomeini.
Click
for big version


Scoop Image:
Amal’s founder Imam Moussa al-Sadr decorates a bombed-out building. Just around the corner are McDonalds and Hardrock Café.
Click
for big version


Scoop Image:
The residential area where PM Fouad Siniora’s office is located is under tight security.
Click for big version


Scoop mage:
Opposition protesters in Martyr Square. In this area are supporters of the Free Patriotic Movement, lead by the controversial Michel Aoun.
Click for big version


Scoop mage:
Protesters in Martyr Square.
Click for big version


Scoop Image:
The Lebanese Army patrols the streets of Beirut.
Click for big version


Scoop Image:
Business owners in Downtown Beirut are facing economic difficulties and voicing increasing frustration. Many shops, like this one, are closed.
Click for big version
*******
Yasmine Ryan is a graduate of the University of Auckland, in Political Studies and French language. She is currently interning with a Lebanese newspaper in Beirut, as part of her Masters degree in International Journalism at the Institut d’Etudes Politiques, Aix-en-Provence.
ENDS

Next in Comment

Gordon Campbell On The Hamas Ceasefire Offer, And Mark Mitchell’s Incompetence
By: Gordon Campbell
Dunne's Weekly: Beware The All-Knowing Controller And Auditor-General
By: Peter Dunne
An Outsider On The Inside: How Ans Westra Created New Zealand’s ‘National Photo Album’
By: The Conversation
How The Fast-Track Law Could Expose Future NZ Governments To Expensive Trade Disputes
By: The Conversation
On unemployment, Winston Peters’ low boiling point and music criticism
By: Gordon Campbell
Download Weekly: Another Pacific cable for NZ by 2026
By: Digitl
View as: DESKTOP | MOBILE © Scoop Media