Coronavirus: Crowds torch government building as lockdown unrest continues
Protesters in Lebanon have torched a government building in the northern city of Tripoli in a fourth night of unrest over strict lockdown measures.
More than 100 people were injured in Thursday's clashes between demonstrators and security forces, the Lebanese Red Cross said.
Earlier in the day, crowds marched at a funeral of protester Omar Tayba who eyewitnesses say was hit by a bullet.
The total curfew was imposed this month to halt a surge in Covid cases.
People are forbidden from leaving their homes unless they are essential workers, and they must rely on deliveries from supermarkets for food.
Many have also been left without an income in a country where a third of the workforce is unemployed and a large proportion relies on the informal sector.
The government is providing some financial assistance to 230,000 families, but half the country's population of nearly seven million is estimated to be living under the poverty line and almost a quarter is in extreme poverty.
The round-the-clock lockdown began on 14 January and was recently extended until 8 February.
The government had hoped the drastic action would prevent the fragile healthcare system being overwhelmed. However, hospitals are now reporting that their intensive care units are running at 94% capacity. Essential equipment and medicines are also in short supply.
Nearly 300,000 people have tested positive for Covid-19 and 2,600 have died in Lebanon since the start of the pandemic, according to data compiled by America's Johns Hopkins University.
But 116,000 of those infections and 1,144 of the deaths have been reported in the past month.
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