Elsewhere, the pandemic’s economic repercussions have incited popular outrage. Lebanon has performed relatively well in managing the pandemic in public health terms, but citizens have demonstrated as preexisting problems of high poverty, currency devaluation, and skyrocketing debt continue to worsen. Ecuador, which faces one of the highest per-capita death rates from COVID-19 among developing nations, recently saw thousands protest against the government’s decision to close some state-owned companies and cut public sector salaries, in an effort to close a gaping $12 billion budget deficit.

Other protests are driven by unresolved issues that were boiling over even before the pandemic began. Citizens in Iraq have resumed protests over corruption, high unemployment, and the violent repression of protesters, with demonstrators in central and southern Iraq clamoring for the removal of governors who they deem to be corrupt. In Mali, tens of thousands have demanded the resignation of President Ibrahim Boubacar amid persistent intercommunal violence compounded by economic stagnation, a dearth of political reforms, and widespread government corruption.

The global wave of protests that the pandemic interrupted now shows signs of returning. As the pandemic reignites existing grievances and creates new drivers of citizen discontent, governments around the world should brace for increasing sociopolitical turbulence in the months ahead. Link : https://carnegieendowment.org/2020/06/30/global-protests-start-to-return-pub-82225