KEY POINTS
  • Lebanon's political leaders named former ambassador to Germany Mustafa Adib as its new prime minister on Monday, starting the formation of a new government tasked with implementing urgent reforms after the previous leadership quit following the devastating Beirut Port explosion.
  • Many Lebanese feel that Adib is merely a new face for a political system whose corruption has long crippled the country.
  • The UN has warned that over half of Lebanon's population is living in poverty with 23% in "extreme poverty" — while 10% of the population owns 70% of its wealth.
Anti-government protesters take part in a demonstration against the political elites and the government, in Beirut, Lebanon, on August 8, 2020 after the massive explosion at the Port of Beirut.

Lebanon's political leaders named diplomat Mustafa Adib as the disaster-stricken country's new prime minister on Monday, starting the formation of a new government tasked with implementing urgent reforms after the previous leadership quit en masse.

But for many Lebanese citizens, hundreds of thousands of whom saw their homes destroyed in the devastating August 4 blast at Beirut's port, the personnel changes at the top of government are merely a facade.