Friday 31 January 2020

Lebanon’s Central Bank Probes $1 Billion Sent Abroad

Lebanon’s Central Bank Probes $1 Billion Sent Abroad

Business

Asharq Al-Awsat
FILE PHOTO: A young demonstrator stands outside the Central Bank of Lebanon in Beirut, Lebanon, October 25, 2019. REUTERS/Alkis Konstantinidis

Lebanese Central Bank Governor Riad Salameh has said that $1 billion had been transferred out of the country, despite tight restrictions on withdrawals, and that the investigation on who made the transfers would "take some time.” "Of the $1.6 billion that was withdrawn (from the Lebanese banking sector) between October 17 and the end of the year... one billion dollars were transferred abroad by Lebanese," Salameh said in an interview with the France 24 TV news channel. Salameh's comments on Thursday came amid suspicions of politically motivated capital flight that are the subject of a probe launched late December.  Since October 17, Lebanon has been rocked by an unprecedented protest movement against an entrenched political class seen as corrupt and incompetent. The protests coincided with an increasingly crippling shortage of dollars, prompting banks to impose tight restrictions on withdrawals and transfers overseas. Protesters have accused bankers of complicity with the political class and suspect politicians of transferring funds abroad despite the restrictions and a prolonged local bank closure when protests first broke out. Salameh said the central bank's investigation "would focus on the $1 billion", but that it would "take some time". The other $600,000 that were taken out of Lebanese banks during the period in question were capital deposits held by foreign banks, he added. He noted there had been reports of "politicians, senior civil servants and bank owners" involved in capital flight, but said a probe is necessary to identify those responsible. A report by the Carnegie think tank in November said that nearly $800 million left Lebanon between October 15 and November 7, when most citizens could not access their funds because banks were closed due to protests. Salameh on Thursday played up the country's monetary stability, despite the Lebanese pound losing more than a third of its value against the dollar on the parallel market in recent weeks. "The rate will stay" the same, he was quoted as saying by Agence France Presse, referring to the peg of 1507.5 pounds against the dollar.  On the street, the currency has been trading at around 2,000 pounds to the greenback.



from Asharq AL-awsat https://aawsat.com/english/home/article/2108366/lebanon%E2%80%99s-central-bank-probes-1-billion-sent-abroad

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