The allegation against the governor of the "Central" regarding "breach of trust"

A protester was killed in Tripoli, Lebanon ... and protests renewed for the fourth day

Clashes between security forces and protesters angry at the general isolation decision.

A.F.B.

A man was killed yesterday in the Lebanese city of Tripoli during clashes between security forces and protesters angry at the strict general isolation decision that left them without a way to earn a living, while protests renewed for the fourth day in a row in Al-Nour Square in the city center.

Local media and witnesses reported that riot police fired shots as protesters tried to storm a government building in Tripoli.

A 30-year-old man was killed during the night of his wounds, after clashes, running and fleeing also caused dozens of injuries.

A security source said that the protester who was killed was hit by a bullet.

Police and a witness said that security forces fired tear gas and rubber bullets at protesters who were throwing stones, threw Molotov cocktails, and set a car on fire.

This is the third consecutive night of violence in one of Lebanon's poorest cities.

Yesterday, Human Rights Watch called for an investigation into the circumstances of the killing of the protester in Lebanon.

The National News Agency reported that yesterday's clashes resulted in the injury of 226 protesters and police.

This comes at a time when the Appeal Attorney General in Mount Lebanon (Central) Judge Ghada Aoun, yesterday, claimed against the governor of the Central Bank of Lebanon, Riad Salameh, and an official at the Central Bank, of the crime of "job negligence and abuse of trust" in the process of managing the subsidized dollar.

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