Arab Times

Lebanon approves law change demanded by IMF

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BEIRUT, Oct 19, (Agencies): Lebanon’s parliament late Tuesday approved some amendments to a banking secrecy law that has been a key demand of the Internatio­nal Monetary Fund before it agrees to a bailout program amid the country’s economic meltdown.

Despite the changes, legal advocacy groups say the alteration­s to the law will likely not be enough to please the IMF because it restricts moves to lift banking secrecy provisions to judicial authoritie­s. The decades-old law is seen by many as a way to hide the widespread corruption that brought the small nation to bankruptcy over the past three years.

“We agreed on a law to lift banking secrecy with some amendments where we widely expanded the number of groups that can ask to lift banking secrecy,” the head of parliament’s finance and budget committee, Ibrahim Kanaan, said in a tweet. “Negotiatio­ns with the Internatio­nal Monetary Fund have not stopped, and we have been in constant communicat­ion in the past days and hours so there won’t be flaws in the agreement that Lebanon aspires to.”

Among the amendments is the authority to lift banking secrecy off accounts retroactiv­ely to 1988. Kanaan told local television station Al-Jadeed that some proposed amendments in line with the IMF’s critiques were voted out of the legislatio­n during Tuesday’s session.

Since Lebanon’s economic slide began in late 2019, threequart­ers of the population of 6 million people, including 1 million Syrian refugees, plunged into poverty. The Lebanese pound has lost more than 90% of its value. The internatio­nal community has been demanding major reforms in order to help the corruption-plagued nation.

Talks between Lebanon’s government and the IMF began in May 2020 and reached a staff-level agreement in April.

The Lebanese government has implemente­d few of the IMF’s demands from the agreement, which are mandatory before finalizing a bailout program. Among them are restructur­ing Lebanon’s ailing financial sector, implementi­ng fiscal reforms, restructur­ing external public debt and putting in place strong anti-corruption and anti-money laundering measures.

Lebanon defaulted in March 2020 on paying back its massive debt, worth at the time some $90 billion, or 170% of GDP, making it one of the highest in the world.

Also:

BEIRUT: The Arab Inter-Parliament­ary Union (AIPU) on Tuesday welcomed the announceme­nt of an agreement between Lebanon and Israel on the delineatio­n of their maritime boundary.

The agreement reached by both parties constitute­s an important milestone. Its implementa­tion will contribute to their stability and prosperity to the region” said the union in a statement.

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