A Look at Life in Lebanon

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Maggy

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Medics treat a Shi'ite Muslim man with his face covered in blood after he was cut on the forehead during a religious procession to mark Ashura in Nabatieh, southern Lebanon on August 19, 2021. (Photo by Aziz Taher/Reuters)



A doctor walks through a corridor of the government-run Rafik Hariri University during a power outage in Beirut, Lebanon, Wednesday, August 11, 2021. Many private hospitals, who offer 80% of Lebanon's medical services, are shutting down because of lack of resources or turning away patients who can't pay. (Photo by Hassan Ammar/AP Photo)



People queue to buy bread from a bakery, after the central bank decided to effectively end subsidies on fuel imports, in Sidon, Lebanon, August 13, 2021. (Photo by Aziz Taher/Reuters)



A man uses his as he waits to get fuel from a gas station, in Jal el-Dib, Lebanon, August 20, 2021. (Photo by Mohamed Azakir/Reuters)



People wait in to get fuel at a gas station in Zalka, Lebanon, August 20, 2021. Roads have been clogged as motorists have queued for the little gasoline left. Prices have soared on the black market. Some confrontations over gasoline have turned deadly. The fuel oil that powers much of Lebanon has also nearly run out, leading to lengthy blackouts. (Photo by Mohamed Azakir/Reuters)



A man tries to start a portable generator, which provides electricity, in Beirut, Lebanon, August 14, 2021. (Photo by Emilie Madi/Reuters)



Barbers shave their customers outside their shop due to a power cut in Beirut, Lebanon, August 20, 2021. (Photo by Mohamed Azakir/Reuters)



A woman sells balloons as children sell roses in Beirut, Lebanon, on August 13, 2021. Lebanon's economic crisis (one of the worst the world has seen in over a century according to the World Bank) has resulted in a surge of children going out to work. Save the Children recently reported a “dramatic increase” in the number of children working in Lebanon, coming across 306 cases of child labour in the first half of this year compared to 346 cases over the whole of 2020. (Photo by Sam Tarling/Getty Images)



A general view of a petrol station on the main highway that link the Capital Beirut to south Lebanon as a man holds a gallon of fuel, right, while cars come from every direction to try and fill their tanks with gasoline, in the coastal town of Jiyeh, south of Beirut, Lebanon, Friday, September 3, 2021. Lebanon is mired in a devastating economic and financial crisis, the worst in its modern history. A result of this has been crippling power cuts and severe shortages in gasoline and diesel that have been blamed on smuggling, hoarding and the cash-strapped government’s inability to secure deliveries of oil products. (Photo by Hassan Ammar/AP Photo)



A Hezbollah supporter fires a rocket-propelled grenade in the air to celebrate the arrival of Iranian fuel tankers to Lebanon, in the eastern town of Baalbek, Lebanon, Thursday, September 16, 2021. The delivery violates US sanctions imposed on Tehran after former President Donald Trump pulled America out of a nuclear deal between Iran and world powers three years ago. (Photo by Bilal Hussein/AP Photo)



A Lebanese soldiers banned a depositor of using a coffeeshop chair to break a bank window, in Beirut, Lebanon, Friday, September 24, 2021. Dozens of Lebanese depositors protested throwing eggs and tomatoes on a number of private banks in central Beirut, demanding to have access to their deposits which have been blocked under informal capital controls since the country's financial and economic crisis began in late 2019. (Photo by Hussein Malla/AP Photo)



A protester holds a model of three guillotines with Arabic that reads: “The end for each of the corrupt”, during a demonstration of solidarity with Judge Tarek Bitar who is investigating last year's deadly seaport blast, outside a court building in Beirut, Lebanon, Wednesday, September 29, 2021. Hundreds of Lebanese, including families of the Beirut port explosion victims, rallied Wednesday outside the court of justice in support of Bitar after he was forced to suspend his work. Bitar is the second judge to take on the complicated investigation. (Photo by Hussein Malla/AP Photo)



A man walks with his children at the end of their school day in Beirut, Lebanon, Wednesday, September 29, 2021. Lebanese students are returning to schools, many for the first time since late 2019, but the country's crippling economic crisis is threatening to derail the first in-class academic year after the pandemic. Public school teachers are on strike, demanding their pay be adjusted to make up for the collapse of the national currency, and a severe fuel shortage threatens to keep classrooms dark. (Photo by Bilal Hussein/AP Photo)



Students sit inside a school bus at the end of their school day in Beirut,lebanon, Wednesday, September 29, 2021. Lebanese students are returning to schools, many for the first time since late 2019, but the country's crippling economic crisis is threatening to derail the first in-class academic year after the pandemic. School buses are scrounging for fuel. With salaries plummeting, teachers in private schools are quitting in droves and leaving the country. (Photo by Bilal Hussein/AP Photo)



A man with his son on a scooter after the end of the day in Beirut, Lebanon, Wednesday, September 29, 2021. This fall, Lebanon's schools have been gripped by the same chaos that has overwhelmed everything else in the country in its historic economic meltdown. The start of the academic year has been postponed repeatedly because thousands of teachers are on strike, demanding adjustments in their salary to cope with hyperinflation. (Photo by Bilal Hussein/AP Photo)



Mourners carry the coffin of Ibrahim Harb, 35, who was critically injured in the massive explosion at Beirut's port last year and who died on Monday nearly 14 months after the blast, as other throw rice during his funeral procession in Beirut, Lebanon, Tuesday, September 28, 2021. On Aug. 4, 2020, hundreds of tons of ammonium nitrate, a highly explosive material used in fertilizers, ignited after a massive fire at the port. The death brings to at least 215 the number of people who have been killed by the blast, according to official records. (Photo by Hussein Malla/AP Photo)



Photo taken on October 3, 2021 shows people fishing on a reef near the coast of the Mediterranean Sea in Beirut, Lebanon. (Photo by Xinhua News Agency/Rex Features/Shutterstock)



People watch firefighters extinguish a fire in one of the fuel tanks at the Zahrani facilities containing petrol in Zahrani, Lebanon, 11 October 2021. The cause of the fire is still yet to be known. (Photo by Wael Hamzeh/EPA/EFE)



Pigeons stand on an electrical wire as firefighters work to extinguish a fire in an oil facility in the southern town of Zahrani, south of the port city of Sidon, Lebanon, Monday, October 11, 2021. A huge fire broke out at an oil facility in southern Lebanon's coastal town of Zahrani, but the cause was not immediately known. (Photo by Hassan Ammar/AP Photo)



This picture taken on October 11, 2021 shows a sunset aerial view of the devastated port of Lebanon's capital Beirut, in darkness during a power outage. (Photo by AFP Photo/Stringer)
 
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