
End of era as Beirut renames Assad Avenue after late music legend Ziad Rahbani
Islamist forces ousted Bashar al-Assad in December, ending five decades of one-family rule, further weakening Hezbollah after a war with Israel and helping to change the balance of power in Lebanon. 'Hafez Al-Assad into the dustbin of history, Ziad Rahbani is the name of the airport road forever!' independent lawmaker Mark Daou who opposes Hezbollah wrote on X.
The government on Tuesday announced the renaming of the avenue, which runs to the international airport through south Beirut, where Hezbollah enjoys strong support. Lebanese actor Ziad Itani welcomed the move, telling AFP that the former Syrian leader was associated with 'dark periods in Lebanese history, marked by massacres, abuses and assassinations'.
Vehicles drive past an obelisk bearing a commemorative plaque of late Syrian president Hafez Al-Assad in Beirut on August 6, 2025, on a highway named after him in 1998.
The Syrian army entered Lebanon in 1976 as part of an Arab force that was supposed to put an end to the country's civil war which began a year earlier. Troops only withdrew in 2005 under enormous pressure after the assassination of Lebanese ex-prime minister Rafic Hariri, which was widely blamed on Syria and Hezbollah.
The Lebanese army dismantled a number of monuments paying homage to the Assad family following the pullout. The government announced the street's name change as it said it had tasked the army with developing a plan to disarm Hezbollah by the end of the year, an unprecedented step since civil war factions gave up their weapons decades ago. The road's renaming 'is the decision that made me the happiest', said Hassan Roumani near the avenue. 'Each time I passed along the Assad road, I felt like Hafez Al-Assad and the Syrian army were still in Lebanon. Now psychologically I feel relieved - that period is over, and for the best,' he told AFP.
Not all welcomed the renaming however, particularly Hezbollah supporters. Faysal Abdelsater, an analyst close to the Iran-backed group, said the move was 'the result of political malice' and urged the local council to reject it. Rahbani, son of iconic singer Fairuz, died last month aged 69 after a decades-long career that revolutionized the country's artistic scene. — AFP

Try Our AI Features
Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:
Comments
No comments yet...
Related Articles

Kuwait Times
18 hours ago
- Kuwait Times
Japan population sees record drop
TOKYO: The population of Japanese nationals fell by a record amount - more than 900,000 people - in 2024, official data showed, as the country battles to reverse its perennially low birth rates. While many developed countries are struggling with low birth rates, the problem is particularly acute in Japan where the population has been declining for years. Prime Minister Shigeru Ishiba has called the situation a 'quiet emergency', pledging family-friendly measures like more flexible working hours and free day care to try and reverse the trend. Last year, the number of Japanese fell by 908,574, or 0.75 percent, to 120.65 million. The decline - for a 16th straight year - was the largest drop since the survey began in 1968, the internal affairs ministry said Wednesday. Foreign resident totals, however, were at their highest since records began in 2013. There were 3.67 million foreigners as of January 1, 2025, representing nearly three percent of the whole population in Japan, which was more than 124.3 million as of that date. The overall population of the country declined by 0.44 percent from 2023. The latest figures come as the government struggles to raise stubbornly low birth rates, while frustration over inflation and other concerns among some voters prompted the rise of a new opposition party with a slogan of 'Japanese First'. The anti-immigrant party has falsely claimed foreigners enjoy more welfare benefits than Japanese nationals. Foreign nationals are helping address labor shortages exacerbated by the ageing population, and most commonly hold jobs in the manufacturing, hospitality and retail sectors. Abandoned homes By age, Japanese nationals aged 65 and over accounted for nearly 30 percent of the population, while the age group between 15 and 64 made up 60 percent, both minor increases from the previous year. Japan has the world's second-oldest population after tiny Monaco, according to the World Bank. The number of births in Japan last year fell below 700,000 for the first time on record, health ministry data released in June said. The fast-ageing nation welcomed 686,061 newborns in 2024 - 41,227 fewer than in 2023, the data showed. It was the lowest figure since records began in 1899. The shrinking population is also gutting rural communities, with the number of abandoned homes in Japan soaring to almost four million over the last two decades, government data released last year showed. Many of the homes belong to people living in major cities who have inherited them from relatives and who are unable or unwilling to keep them renovated. The world's oldest person, Japanese woman Tomiko Itooka, died at the age of 116 in December. Women typically enjoy longevity in Japan, but the expanding elderly population is leading to soaring medical and welfare costs, with a shrinking labor force to pay for it — AFP

Kuwait Times
a day ago
- Kuwait Times
‘How much worse could it get?' Gazans fear full occupation
GAZA CITY: 'When will this nightmare end?' wonders Amal Hamada, a 20-year-old displaced woman who, like most Gazans, feels powerless before the threat of full Zionist occupation after 22 months of war. Rumours that the Zionist government might decide on a full occupation of the Palestinian territory spread from Zionist entity to war-torn Gaza before any official announcement, sowing fear and despair. Like nearly all Gazans, Hamada has been displaced several times by the war, and ended up in Deir el-Balah in central Gaza, where the Zionist military carried out operations last month for the first time in the war. 'We've lived through many wars before, but nothing like this one. This war is long and exhausting, from one displacement to another. We are worn out,' the woman told AFP. Like her, Ahmad Salem, 45, wonders how things can get worse in a territory that already faces chronic food shortages, mass displacement and daily air strikes. 'We already live each day in anxiety and fear of the unknown. Talk of an expansion of Zionist ground operations means more destruction and more death,' Salem told AFP. 'There is no safe space in Gaza. If Zionist entity expands its ground operations again, we'll be the first victims,' he said from a camp west of Gaza City where he had found shelter. Zionist Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu was to chair a meeting of his security cabinet later on Thursday to seek approval to expand military operations in Gaza, including in densely populated areas. 'We read and hear everything in the news... and none of it is in our favor,' said 40-year-old Sanaa Abdullah from Gaza City. 'Zionist entity doesn't want to stop. The bombardment continues, the number of martyrs and wounded keeps rising, famine and malnutrition are getting worse, and people are dying of hunger', she said. Its 2.4 million residents are fully dependent on humanitarian aid, and live under the daily threat of air strikes. The Zionist army announced in mid-July that it controlled 75 percent of Gaza, including a broad strip the whole length of the Zionist border and three main military corridors that cut across the territory from east to west. The UN Office for the Coordination of Humanitarian Affairs (OCHA) says that more than 87 percent of the Gaza Strip is under unrevoked evacuation orders or designated as an Zionist military zone. The remaining areas are the most densely populated. The city of Khan Yunis in the south, Gaza City in the north, and Deir el-Balah and its adjacent refugee camps in the centre. 'Now they speak of plans to expand their operations as if we are not even human, just animals or numbers,' Abdullah laments. 'A new ground invasion means new displacement, new fear and we won't even find a place to hide', she told AFP. 'What will happen if they start another ground operation? Only God is with us.' A widening of the war 'would risk catastrophic consequences for millions of Palestinians and could further endanger the lives of the remaining hostages in Gaza', senior UN official Miroslav Jenca told the Security Council on Tuesday. — AFP

Kuwait Times
2 days ago
- Kuwait Times
End of era as Beirut renames Assad Avenue after late music legend Ziad Rahbani
Lebanon has decided to rebaptize a thoroughfare named after former Syrian president Hafez al-Assad in favour of late Lebanese musician and playwright Ziad Rahbani, a move many welcomed on Wednesday. The decision marks the end of an era and a rupture with the authoritarian rule of former Syrian leaders Hafez Al-Assad and his son Bashar - close allies of Lebanon's Hezbollah militant group - who from Damascus held Lebanon in a stranglehold for almost three decades. Islamist forces ousted Bashar al-Assad in December, ending five decades of one-family rule, further weakening Hezbollah after a war with Israel and helping to change the balance of power in Lebanon. 'Hafez Al-Assad into the dustbin of history, Ziad Rahbani is the name of the airport road forever!' independent lawmaker Mark Daou who opposes Hezbollah wrote on X. The government on Tuesday announced the renaming of the avenue, which runs to the international airport through south Beirut, where Hezbollah enjoys strong support. Lebanese actor Ziad Itani welcomed the move, telling AFP that the former Syrian leader was associated with 'dark periods in Lebanese history, marked by massacres, abuses and assassinations'. Vehicles drive past an obelisk bearing a commemorative plaque of late Syrian president Hafez Al-Assad in Beirut on August 6, 2025, on a highway named after him in 1998. The Syrian army entered Lebanon in 1976 as part of an Arab force that was supposed to put an end to the country's civil war which began a year earlier. Troops only withdrew in 2005 under enormous pressure after the assassination of Lebanese ex-prime minister Rafic Hariri, which was widely blamed on Syria and Hezbollah. The Lebanese army dismantled a number of monuments paying homage to the Assad family following the pullout. The government announced the street's name change as it said it had tasked the army with developing a plan to disarm Hezbollah by the end of the year, an unprecedented step since civil war factions gave up their weapons decades ago. The road's renaming 'is the decision that made me the happiest', said Hassan Roumani near the avenue. 'Each time I passed along the Assad road, I felt like Hafez Al-Assad and the Syrian army were still in Lebanon. Now psychologically I feel relieved - that period is over, and for the best,' he told AFP. Not all welcomed the renaming however, particularly Hezbollah supporters. Faysal Abdelsater, an analyst close to the Iran-backed group, said the move was 'the result of political malice' and urged the local council to reject it. Rahbani, son of iconic singer Fairuz, died last month aged 69 after a decades-long career that revolutionized the country's artistic scene. — AFP