The Lebanese government expects to resign on Monday in the wake of the Beirut explosion, sources say


A senior ministerial source told CNN that he believed the government would be reduced to career status Monday night. Three cabinet ministers have already been ousted, along with seven members of parliament.

Lebanon has been suffering from its worst economic crisis in decades, along with rising rates of coronavirus, and the government has been plagued by accusations of corruption and gross mismanagement.

Tuesday’s blast, which damaged or destroyed much of the Lebanese capital and was linked to a long-ignored stash of potentially explosive chemicals, was the latest straw for many Beirut residents.

Prime Minister Hassan Diab, a self-styled reformer, was brought into power in December last year, two months after a popular uprising brought down the previous government. Diab’s government is made up of technocrats and backed by major political parties, including the Iranian-backed political and militant group Hezbollah.

Now, in less than a year, the country will be tasked with finding a third prime minister to deal with the spiraling crisis facing Lebanon on a number of fronts.

Hassan Diab, pictured in December 2019.
Protesters gather on Saturday in a protest rally in Beirut.

Lebanon’s currency has lost 70% of its value since anti-government protests began in October. Poverty has gone up, with the World Bank projecting that more than half of the country’s population would become poor by 2020.

The government was also seen as powerless in the face of a growing banking crisis. The state has not passed a law on capital controls, which exacerbates the country’s severe liquidity shrinkage. The majority of the people in the country were subject to strict and arbitrary limit for cash gain almost a year ago. Meanwhile, it is widely believed that billions of US dollars have been withdrawn from Lebanon by the country’s economic elite, further depleting the foreign exchange reserves.

Lebanon’s financial woes were exacerbated earlier this year by government – imposed lockdowns designed to halt the spread of the coronavirus pandemic but also severely hamper the country’s damaging economy.

Diab’s ministers had repeatedly accused the ruling class of disrupting its reform plans. Politicians aligned with the country’s banking elite torpedoed the government’s economic program through the IMF, which was expected to dig into bank profits.

The protests over the weekend were some of the biggest and most violent the city has seen in almost a year. The city shrank in anger when Protestants occupied several government ministries and threw stones and shards of glass at security forces. Police fired hundreds of rounds with tear gas like rubber bullets and, in some cases, live fire.

.