Madina Mustafa Ali (right) says she and her seven-month-old baby Amir will be staying on Beirut's Martyrs' Square as they have nowhere else to go Lebanon is a country that knows war all too well.
He was sitting on a dirty, sun-baked patch of pavement on the edge of Martyrs’ Square in central Beirut – now home for the ...
Protesters in Beirut have stormed government ministries ... Sounds of gunfire have also been heard from central Martyrs' Square. In a televised address, Lebanese PM Hassan Diab said he would ...
But then phones began to ping and a ripple of horror spread through Martyrs’ Square in central Beirut, where many Shia Muslims had fled Israel’s bombing of the city’s southern districts the ...
The Beirut Gate development will comprise eight plots spread over 21,448 square metres and a built-up area of 178,500 square metres overlooking the famous Martyrs’ Square of Lebanon, downtown ...
In Beirut’s Martyrs Square, Ali (46) looked up from his phone to announce that a ceasefire was coming. Around him were many relatives, including his mother-in-law, wife and one-year-old baby.