BEIRUT: It started with a ‘selfie’: a self-portrait picture of 16-year-old Mohammad al-Chaar, who was killed in a Beirut car bomb. It has turned into a mini political protest by Lebanese citizens.

In dozens of pictures posted on Facebook and Twitter, young Lebanese hold up signs with a personal message and the hashtag #notamartyr, protesting the cycle of political violence in their country.

The “Not A Martyr” campaign sprung up after Chaar was killed in a Dec 27 car bombing that targeted moderate Lebanese politician Mohammad Chatah.

Moments before the explosion in downtown Beirut, the teenager had posed for a selfie with his friends. A day later, he died from his injuries in hospital.

Angered and appalled by his death, a group of young Lebanese started a protest page on Facebook.

“We can no longer normalise the persistent violence. We can no longer desensitise ourselves to the constant horror of life in Lebanon,” the page reads. “We are victims, not martyrs,” adds the page, rejecting the notion that innocent bystanders be labelled in the same way as those who chose to die for a political or religious cause.

More than 7,000 people have “liked” the page, and hundreds have posted their own selfies.

Dyala Badran, a 25-year-old Beirut resident, was among the first to respond to the campaign, posting a selfie on her Twitter account on Dec 30.

She looks into the camera, clutching a small sheet of white paper with the message “I want to bring the murderers to justice” written in black, and the word justice underlined.

“I posted probably one of the more dramatic ones,” she told AFP. “I was very angry that he (Chaar) was being labelled a martyr, because in my eyes, he wasn’t, he was a victim of murder.”

Another participant, Carina Aoun, left Lebanon two years ago for Dubai, and posted a message expressing the frustration of many Lebanese who end up abroad.

She also objected to those terming Chaar a “martyr,” and said his death hit home for many young Lebanese who imagined themselves in his place. “The youth in Lebanon feel with him because it could have been any of us.”

While the campaign has attracted support and attention, it comes at a time when Lebanon is deeply divided.

The bomb that killed Chaar was the latest in a string of attacks, many thought to be linked to the conflict in neighbouring Syria.

Many Lebanese feel trapped by their country’s political violence but others are directly involved in the long-running fighting in the northern city of Tripoli, or even heading across the border to battle for or against the Syrian regime.

Badran acknowledged the campaign’s prospects for short-term change are slim, but said she was heartened by it nonetheless. “If we keep talking about these issues, then maybe we’ll remember to work on them,” she said.

“I think it’s very important to just talk about these things, to not just move on as we usually do.” —AFP

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