Government cordon
The continuing protest follows on from a Hezbollah-led rally in Beirut on Friday, where thousands of people demanded the resignation of Siniora and the government.
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"No matter how long they stay in the street ... this will not bring down the government ..."
Saad al-Hariri, Sunni Muslim leader
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They demanded imposing a blockade on the government offices, but later eased it after contacts between opposition leaders and Arab diplomats, according to a senior opposition source.
On Saturday, hundreds of supporters of Hezbollah and its allies - the Shia Muslim Amal Movement and the Free Patriotic Movement of Christian opposition leader Michel Aoun - were stretched out on the pavement wrapped in blankets or huddled around camp fires keeping warm in the morning chill.
Scores of soldiers have cordoned off the government offices in Beirut with barbed wire and metal barriers.
Saudi backing
King Abdullah of Saudi Arabia, an Arab diplomatic heavyweight, told Fouad Siniora and ministers with him in the government headquarters that his country supported them, Siniora's office said.
Saudi Arabia would not accept any deterioration in the security situation, Abdullah said during a phone call.
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Siniora's government is ranged against a Hezbollah-led political alliance |
Although the dispute is political, many Lebanese fear the situation could spark sectarian violence. Tension between Sunnis and Shias is high, as is bad feeling between Christians who support leaders allied to the rival camps.
Participants in Friday's rally created a sea of Lebanese flags downtown that spilled onto the surrounding streets amid the deafening sound of Lebanese nationalist songs.
Many chanted slogans demanding that Siniora quit.
In response, Sunni Muslim leader Saad al-Hariri, who backs Siniora, told Al Hurra television late on Friday: "No matter how long they stay in the street ... this will not bring down the government ..."
Aoun speech
In a speech during the protest, Michel Aoun, the leader of the Free Patriotic Movement party, said: "I call on the prime minister and his ministers to quit."