While vaccinations are not compulsory in Lebanon, authorities are clamping down as cases grow
Associated Press in Beirut
Hundreds of people rallied in Beirut on Saturday to protest against measures imposed against the unvaccinated, saying individuals should have the right to decide whether to be inoculated.
Vaccination is not compulsory in Lebanon, but in recent days authorities have cracked down on people who are not inoculated or do not carry a negative PCR test.
Saturday’s protest by nearly 300 people in downtown Beirut came a day after the daily number of new coronavirus cases hit a record 7,974.
Authorities have imposed fresh restrictions including the requirement of a vaccination certificate or negative PCR test for entry into restaurants, hotels and similar venues.
As of Monday, civil servants must either be vaccinated or take regular PCR tests to be able to go to work. Many civil servants cannot afford to pay for regular PCR tests, given Lebanon’s severe economic crisis and currency crash.
“No to the dictatorship of vaccination,” read one banner carried by protesters.
Lebanon, which has a population of 6 million including a million Syrian refugees, has registered more than 760,000 cases and 9,250 deaths since discovering its first case in February 2020.
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