What is happening in Beirut?

Updated October 15, 2021 at 9:52 p.m. EDT|Published October 14, 2021 at 1:04 p.m. EDT
Hezbollah supporters burn photos of Judge Tarek Bitar in Beirut on Oct. 14. (Nabil Mounzer/EPA-EFE/Shutterstock)

A tense calm settled over the Lebanese capital Friday after a day of armed clashes, marking some of the worst violence in years, left seven people dead and raised fears among residents of a wider descent into bloodshed.

Banks, schools, offices and shops were closed in many places as mourners held funerals in several parts of the country.

The day before, explosions and gunfire had plunged the Mediterranean city into chaos. Gunmen first fired on a protest led by Lebanon’s powerful Hezbollah movement. Hezbollah supporters then fired back, setting off an hours-long street battle that evoked memories of the country’s civil war.

Hezbollah and its political allies had called the demonstration to urge the removal of a top judge from an investigation into the massive blast at Beirut’s main port last year. In a statement, Hezbollah and the allied Amal movement said that the violence was carried out “by organized and armed groups” aiming “to drag the country to purposeful disorder.”

But even as the streets quieted Friday, the latest escalation could test what remains of Lebanon’s stability. In recent years, the tiny nation has faced compounding crises, including the pandemic, severe shortages of basic goods and fuel and the erosion of the state’s legitimacy.

Day-long firefight racks Beirut after Hezbollah demonstration attacked