The security requirement is high in the Lebanese capital. Meters with barbed wire and large cement blocks surround the parliament building. Behind are several soldiers. In front, a large crowd of people gathered.

- No to Parliament's meeting, the protesters shout.

The Parliament's agenda today voted on several laws: an amnesty law and one that addresses the issue of corruption, writes the Lebanese newspaper The Daily Star. In other words, acts that caused the people to protest against the political elite and the government for a whole 34 days.

- They say they were elected by the people but the people here protest against them and we try to express our opinion in every way. We do not need you or your corrupt laws issued by this parliament or by corrupt legislators, ”protester Fadi Hayek told the AP.

About twenty parliamentarians have chosen to boycott the vote.

Bodyguard fired warning shot

There is no physical way for parliamentarians to enter the building, reports France 24. All the entrances to the Nejmeh square, where the parliament building is located, have been blocked by the protesters.

The cars trying to get through are hindered. The military is trying to push away the crowd gathered at the barricades, which in turn erupts in scanning "revolution, revolution, revolution".

During the morning several reports of gunfire came. According to reports, there was a bodyguard who fired warning shots at the protesters who tried to block the cars, Reuters writes.

"A sinking ship"

On October 29, Prime Minister Saad Hariri and the government resigned as a result of the protests. And no solution seems to be in sight.

It is also this that the protesters oppose, that they choose to implement new laws instead of solving the government crisis and the acute economic crisis in which the country is located.

"What they need to do is appoint a prime minister and a government," demonstrator Rania al-Akhras told the AP.

Speaker Nabih Berri - who has acted in a bag in several of the protests' songs - has been similar to the country's situation with Titanic, that is, a sinking ship.