The Phnom Penh Post

Prosecutor presses charges against former Lebanon PM

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A STATE prosecutor has pressed charges against former Lebanese Prime Minister Najib Mikati over alleged corruption, state media saidonWedn­esday,amidunprec­edented anti-graft protests.

Mikati, 63, along with his brother, son and a Lebanese bank have been accused of “illicit enrichment”, the National News Agency reported.

The former prime minister, who was last in power in 2014, denied the allegation­s, saying they carried a “message” and that he was “surprised” by the timing.

He said the charges were punishment for not supporting the election of Lebanese President Michel Aoun in 2016 and for calling on the government to resign in the face of mass protests that broke out last week.

Bank Audi, which was accused of cooperatin­g with

Mikati’s actions, also emphatical­ly denied the allegation­s in a statement, strongly denying “any activity related to illicit enrichment”.

Mikati added that he would be willing to lift banking secrecy on his accounts, a measure Aoun has suggested for high-ranking officials in response to demonstrat­ors’ demands.

Lebanon has strict privacy rules for bank accounts, which critics say makes it susceptibl­e to money laundering.

Corruption is rife in Lebanon, but it is rare for politician­s to face legal proceeding­s.

A telecoms mogul, Mikati has multiple business interests in West Africa and across the globe, in partnershi­p with his brother Taha.

The former premier’s estimated wealth is $2.5 billion, making him among the world’s 1,000 richest people, according to Forbes.

In 2018, Lebanese media reported that Mikati and his family members were accused of wrongly receiving millions of dollars in subsidised housing loans. The loans were supposed to help low and middle-income Lebanese buy homes.

The government-backed scheme has subsequent­ly stopped granting new loans.

More than 25 per cent of Lebanon’s population lives in poverty, according to the World Bank. Tens of thousands of Lebanese have poured onto the streets daily since last Thursday in an unpreceden­ted outburst of anger against a political class widely seen as corrupt.

Some demonstrat­ors have raised signs calling for the housing loan programme to be revived.

 ?? AFP ?? South African Democratic Alliance party leader Mmusi Maimane has resigned as opposition leader.
AFP South African Democratic Alliance party leader Mmusi Maimane has resigned as opposition leader.

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