An Overview of the Lebanese Crisis
Lebanon, a country in the Middle East with only 10452 square km, faced a civil war in 1975 and lasted for 15 years. The Lebanese Civil War is generally regarded as one of the bloodiest and longest in Middle Eastern history. It has been widely described as a civil war since it split the Lebanese people along sectarian lines, including Christians and Muslims militias battling for control of Lebanon's political structure. The country has a high degree of ethnoreligious heterogeneity, which are 3 religions, and 18 recognized sects. As a result, the Lebanese civil war was an internationalized civil war After 15 years of bombings and massacres that took over 150,000 lives, the Arab League mediated a peace treaty called the Taif agreement, which enabled the various groups to come to terms. This agreement was a bad decision, leading the country to revolt in 2019 until today, and resulting in 2 explosions to date due to corruption, nepotism, government theft, interventionism, and sectarianism. Today, the Lebanese currency lost 95% of its value, the country is facing a severe economic crisis, unemployment is at 40%, people cannot afford their basic needs counting food, fuel, gas, hospitals and medicine.
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