andy perotti, we for missing lebanon, 110 percent of the seats in recent parliamentary elections. that's the 1st and the end of the civil war more than 3 decades ago. but the victory doesn't seem to be the clean break from traditional politics many hoped for. and the not discussing and aligned, they know how to report some people. the walls are coming down 2 years on lebanon's political establishment has begun to remove barriers that stood between anti corruption protestors and state institutions through the ballot box and against the odds. those who were demanding political change made their way to parliament, winning 10 percent of the seats in the recent election. it's a small crack in the political classes, hold on power, who often used violence to silence opposition. for the longest time, politics in lebanon has been about dividing the shares, and compromising between the different parties in order for each one of them to have its own share after certain bargaining. this is not in democratic process. there when is a 1st and post civil war politics, which has been dominated by