Home
/
Isiam
/
Islamic World
/
Poverty and conflict affect Lebanese youth
Poverty and conflict affect Lebanese youth
May 20, 2026 6:06 AM

  Lebanese youth in Tripoli suburbs are becoming increasingly used to conflict in rising sectarian distrust and violence.

  "People get used to war. During the last battle, children were still coming to play. Can you imagine, a seven-year-old boy running through the bullets just to play video games," says Mohammad Darwish, a calm man with a curled beard framing his face.

  Sitting behind the counter of his cybercafé, located in one of the main streets of the Bab al-Tabbaneh neighborhood in this northern Lebanese city, Darwish says that his young customers have resigned themselves to the persistence of armed conflicts.

  Tough neighborhood

  Despite their age, they are pretty sure that clashes - which have become routine here over the past six years - will erupt again sooner or later. Even when calm reigns, the shelled and bullet-riddled buildings in Tabbaneh stand as a reminder of previous clashes.

  The last eruption of violence was in late October 2014. Clashes paralyzed Tripoli for three days and destroyed part of the historic old city, leaving at least 41 people dead. The army now controls Tabbaneh, with soldiers and tanks deployed on every street corner.

  Tabbaneh is probably the hardest neighborhood to grow up in the whole of Tripoli. Despite being the second largest city in Lebanon, barely 80km north of Beirut, policy neglect by various central governments has left this Sunni-majority city suffering from alarming poverty, unemployment and social exclusion, and Tabbaneh is one of its poorest and most marginalized areas.

  Seventy-six percent of Tabbaneh's inhabitants live below the poverty line, according to a study, "Urban Poverty in Tripoli", published in 2012 by the UN Economic and Social Commission for Western Asia.

  These circumstances, aggravated by the political exploitation of sectarianism within a very conservative society, have fuelled the frequent rounds of violence, mainly between Tabbaneh and the neighborhood of Jabal Mohsen.

  The two neighborhoods are separated just by just one street, but while Bab al-Tabbaneh inhabitants are mostly Sunni (like the main Syrian opposition groups), most of Jabal Mohsen's inhabitants are Alawites (the same sect as Syrian President Bashar al-Assad).

  This sectarianism has determined a rivalry that dates back to the Syrian occupation of Lebanon which began in 1976 and ended in 2005, and has turned violent again since 2008, more so since the beginning of the Syrian uprising in 2011. During the last three years, more than 20 rounds of fighting have broken out in Tripoli, most of them between Tabbaneh and Mohsen militias.

  "We fight to defend our people, to achieve peace," says 19-year-old Khaled, who usually works in a bakery but also belongs to a local militia. But Ahmad, who is the same age, is skeptical: "People fight because they don't have money or work."

  Hoda al-Rifai, a Ruwwad youth officer, says: "Many families don't have incomes. Whenever the conflict starts, the fighters get paid. And these fighters also give money to children to fulfil specific tasks. They can have three dollars a day and this is better than going to school. Their parents also think this way."

  A new self-confidence

  Stereotypes also contribute to make things hard for Tabbaneh's youth - including finding a job outside the neighborhood - and shape their personality, explains Hoda. "When we started, the youth had no self-confidence. The media do not produce an image of these neighborhoods as areas where you can find brilliant young men, willing to study. They just underline the clashes and all kinds of negatives things."

  Nevertheless, various studies have found that only a small percentage of the estimated up to 80,000 Tabbaneh inhabitants take part in combats, and Sarah al-Charif, Lebanon director of Ruwwad, stresses the immediate improvements observed in Tabbaneh and Mohsen youths who participate in the NGO's projects.

  PHOTO CAPTION

  A Lebanese soldier runs across Syria street which divides the rival Sunni Bab-al-Tabbaneh and the Alawite Jabal Mohsen neighborhoods during clashes with gunmen in the northern Lebanese city of Tripoli on October 26, 2014

  Source: Aljazeera.com

Comments
Welcome to mreligion comments! Please keep conversations courteous and on-topic. To fosterproductive and respectful conversations, you may see comments from our Community Managers.
Sign up to post
Sort by
Show More Comments
Islamic World
UN: At least 733 Iraqis killed in January
  The United Nations has said that at least 733 Iraqis were killed during violence in January, even when leaving out casualties from an embattled western province of Anbar.   The figures issued on Saturday by the UN's mission to Iraq (UNAMI) show that 618 civilians and 115 members of the security...
Report demands US probe Yemen drone strike
  US policy on drone strikes has been questioned by a rights group who say a strike on a wedding procession killed civilians, not al-Qaeda fighters, as previously claimed by US officials.   Rights group Human Rights Watch (HRW) published a 28-page report on Thursday that said all the victims of a...
UN decries child abuse in Syria
  The United Nations has accused both sides to the Syria conflict of grave violations against children.   Children caught in the Syrian war are being recruited as child soldiers, used as human shields, and tortured, according to a new UN report.   The report, released on Tuesday, found that in the early...
Civilian carnage surges in Afghanistan
  Wheeling himself out of the children's ward of Kabul's Emergency Surgical Centre for War Victims, Qasem appeared unmoved by the autumn sun and flowers he turned his wheelchair to face.   "I'll never get better," the seven-year-old from Ghazni province said as his left leg protruded from the red-and-black wheelchair he...
Children's rights ignored in Egypt crackdown
  Sara Atef was wearing her school uniform on the day she was arrested by riot police.   The 16-year-old had become a regular sight at anti-government rallies organized by Muslim Brotherhood-affiliated groups in her hometown of 6 October city, a sprawling satellite development an hour's drive from central Cairo.   Sara, who...
Egypt's human rights situation is going from ugly to uglier
  Egypt's deteriorating human rights situation in the past three years has had something of a boiled frog effect to it - things have gotten worse just gradually enough that the country's unfolding problems have been pushed to the margins.   But the severe abuses meted out to Egyptian citizens are crushing...
No end in sight for Egypt crackdown
  On the morning of October 31, 15-year-old Yomna Abu Eissa was wearing her school uniform and carrying her backpack when she was handcuffed and taken into custody in Alexandria, Egypt's second-biggest city .   Her school uniform was ultimately replaced by the plain white garments worn by prisoners. In November, a...
UN: Clashes in Iraq's Anbar displaced 300,000
  Violence in Iraq's Sunni-dominated Anbar province, where armed groups fully control one city and parts of another, has displaced up to 300,000 people in six weeks, the United Nations has said.   The province has been hit by a surge in fighting between pro- and anti-government forces that began at the...
Displaced Syrians battle for online lifeline
  Yousef sat on the navy couch with his arms wrapped tightly around his legs, and rocked back and forth.   It's a position he has become all too familiar with over the past year. He turned on his laptop and waited fitfully for Skype to load.   "Without Skype I wouldn't be...
UN: attacks on West Bank Palestinians on rise
  The number of attacks on Palestinians by Israeli settlers in the occupied West Bank has increased every year for the past eight years, according to figures from the United Nations.   About 2,100 attacks have been launched by Israelis since 2006 and annual totals are up from 115 that year to...
Related Classification
Copyright 2023-2026 - www.mreligion.com All Rights Reserved