Beirut: Hundreds of Lebanese protested in the capital Beirut on Sunday against the country's sectarian political system.

Emulating protests that have spread across the Arab world in recent weeks,  some Lebanese protesters chanted the now-familiar refrain of "The people want  to bring down the regime".

Lebanon is governed by a delicate power-sharing system to maintain the balance between the country's many sects.

"We are here to bring down the sectarian system in Lebanon because it is more
of a dictatorial system than dictatorship systems themselves," said protester
Rahshan Saglam.

Lebanon suffered a 15-year civil war which ended in 1990 and killed 150,000 people. Major sectarian violence, threatening to tip the country into a new  civil war, also broke out in 2008.

The organisers handed out a leaflet saying they demanded a "secular, civil,  democratic, socially just and equal state" and called for an increase in the minimum wage and lower prices for basic goods.

A Facebook page about the event showed 2,656 people due to attend the protest
but only a few hundred showed up and marched along a route that was a
frontline during the civil war.

Lebanon has been without a government since Shiite group Hezbollah and its
allies toppled the government last month in a dispute over a UN-backed
tribunal investigating the 2005 assassination of statesman Rafik Al Hariri.

Popular uprisings have unseated the leaders of Tunisia and Egypt. Libya is
the latest Arab country to witness major unrest.