National Post (National Edition)

U.S. targets Lebanese president's son-in-law

Hezbollah support draws sanctions

- HUMEYRA PAMUK AND MATT SPETALNICK

WASHINGTON • The United States imposed sanctions on Friday on Gebran Bassil, the leader of Lebanon's biggest Christian political bloc and son-in-law of president Michel Aoun, accusing him of corruption and ties to Hezbollah.

Bassil heads the Free Patriotic Movement (FPM), founded by Aoun, and has served as minister of telecoms, of energy and water and of foreign affairs.

The target of protests that erupted last year against a political class accused of pillaging the state, Bassil said in a Twitter post that sanctions did not scare him and that he had not been “tempted” by promises.

The sanctions could complicate efforts by prime minister-designate Saad al-Hariri to navigate Lebanon's sectarian politics and assemble a cabinet to tackle a financial meltdown, the country's worst crisis since its 1975-1990 civil war.

A source familiar with the process said the move was likely to harden the FPM's stance in negotiatio­ns on a new government needed to enact reforms demanded by foreign donors to tackle corruption, waste and mismanagem­ent to unlock aid.

In recent months, the U.S. has also placed sanctions on several officials linked to Hezbollah, the armed Iran-backed Shi'ite movement that has become Lebanon's most powerful political force, and which Washington considers a terrorist group. Hezbollah condemned the U.S. move as purely political and “a blatant and gross interferen­ce.”

“This decision specifical­ly aims to force a big Lebanese political team to submit to American conditions and dictates on Lebanon,” it said in a statement.

The FPM has a political alliance with Hezbollah and Bassil has defended the group as vital to the defence of Lebanon.

The Treasury Department said Bassil was at the “forefront of corruption in Lebanon” where successive government­s have failed to reduce mounting sovereign debt or address failing infrastruc­ture and the loss-making power sector that cost state coffers billions of dollars while power cuts persisted.

“Through his corrupt activities, Bassil has also undermined good governance and contribute­d to the prevailing system of corruption and political patronage that plagues Lebanon, which has aided and abetted Hizballah's (Hezbollah) destabiliz­ing activities,” U.S. Secretary of State Mike Pompeo said in a statement.

A senior U.S. official said Bassil's support for Hezbollah was “every bit of the motivation” for targeting him for sanctions.

Bassil was sanctioned under the Global Magnitsky Human Rights Accountabi­lity Act, which targets human rights abuses and corruption around the world.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from Canada