On the edges of a protest in Lebanons capital, 24-year-old cartoonist Mohamad Nohad Alameddine bites through sticky tape and plasters one of his political sketches to a sidewall. "I havent been able to work with newspapers, so instead I come down and stick them up in the street," says the unemployed artist, who graduated this year with a masters degree in press cartoons. Until this autumn, Alameddine had been poking fun at his countrys political and economic ills in sketches he posted online. But from October 17, anti-government protests swept across the country, giving him a broader audience as protesters denounced the very same issues he had been drawing all along. In public spaces, he and friends stuck up gags about failing electricity and trash management plans, as well as sketches mocking a political class perceived as corrupt. In one cartoon, a skinny man stripped down to his underpants stands in front of a leader carried in on a gilded throne. "We want your underwear to pay back the debt," says the mustachioed politician, clutching a lit cigar. Now in the grips of a dollar liquidity crunch, Lebanon is staggering under a public debt of $86 billion. Wherever there was a protest, "Id go down and stick up a related cartoon," says Alameddine, who signs his drawings as Nougature. "A lot of people encouraged me." In late October, the government stepped down, but a deeply divided political class has yet to form a new one. - Inspiration everywhere - Last month, Alameddine drew his same long-nosed politician clutching the leg of his throne. "Dont worry my love, Id never leave you," says the character he has called President Nazeeh, dressed in a rabbit-themed pajama onesie. Alameddine says the fictional leader is his way of criticizing the traditional ruling class without naming names. "President Nazeeh headed a militia in the civil war and then became a political figure" after the 1975-1990 conflict, he says. "We see how he deals with people, what he does under the table, what he says in public, how he manages corruption rings -- but in a funny way," he says. "In the end you want to laugh at whats hurting you." On the other side of Beirut, 31-year-old Bernard Hage pens away at his digital drawing board, trying out his latest idea for a cartoon. He says he gladly swapped a career in advertising for the arts several years ago, including drawing a stream of jokes under the name The Art of Boo. In May, months before the anti-graft street movement, he drew a group of men in suits sitting in the lotus position in yoga class. "Very good. Now exhale, keep ignoring the crisis," their leotard-clad instructor says. Hage says inspiration is everywhere in Lebanon, "whether youre in a taxi, at the vegetable shop or at the barber." But the recent outburst of popular anger has amplified debate. "I found my place in the revolution," says the satirical artist, who regularly posts on social media and draws once a week for a local newspaper. "My role is to keep the conversation going, shed light on issues." - Emigrate? - To celebrate one month since the protests began, he drew a vision for the country 10 years from now, featuring "things wed like to hear in the near future". On a page spread in French-language newspaper LOrient-Le Jour, he imagined a world with smooth public transport and no daily electricity cuts. "Daddy, whats a dijoncteur?" one girl asks, using the French word for the circuit breaker that trips before power outages. A stick figure clings to a pole in a subway, as a voice overhead calls out the next stop in central Beirut. "Change here for line 1&4. Mind the gap," it says. To avoid offending anyone, Hage says he rarely names political leaders, and depicts them all across the board as besuited figures with little bellies poking out. "I discovered theres a big gap between my generation and my parents generation," he says. "They lived through the war, saw death and were terrified by it -- and its not easy for them to leave that behind," or call out their traditional leaders, he says. But he says it is time to put the younger generation in charge to fix the countrys mounting woes -- a polluted environment, a crashing economy, and high youth unemployment. Otherwise, the cartoonist -- also a musician and occasional writer -- says he will follow his peers and emigrate. "Im learning German because, if this doesnt work out, I will leave and not come back."
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