The Pak Banker

Lebanon's central bank governor won't step down

- SINGAPORE -AFP

Lebanon's central bank governor told CNBC this week that he wants to help the country in its time of distress - and he won't resign.

"You cannot resign … in an environmen­t of a crisis, because it would look like going away from the task you have to perform," Riad Salameh said. "I don't want to resign because I am continuing what I have in my mind, as a strategy to get out of this crisis, and I'm sorry to disappoint those who are spreading rumors on my resignatio­n every day," he told CNBC's Hadley Gamble.

Apart from the coronaviru­s pandemic and ongoing economic troubles, the country is still reeling from a massive explosion last month in Beirut that's believed to have killed about 200 people. The Aug. 4 blast was blamed on 2,750 tons of ammonium nitrate stored in an unsecured warehouse.

The explosion is estimated to have cost $4.6 billion in damages, according to a World Bank report.

The government resigned en masse following outrage over the devastatin­g explosion which injured over 6,000 and left 300,000 people homeless. Prime Minister Hassan Diab stepped down in the wake of the tragedy and blamed the disaster on endemic corruption.

Mustafa Adib, the former ambassador to Germany, was last week named the new prime minister, though many Lebanese are not convinced he will bring about real change to the country's political system.

Central bank governor Salameh, however, does not take responsibi­lity for the state Lebanon is in. The past 10 months have not been easy, he noted, pointing to various factors including sanctions on a Lebanon-based bank, a shutdown in the banking sector, the government's debt default and the coronaviru­s.

Salameh defended his efforts, saying: "I am the governor who tried, with the means we have, to maintain the system, not to let the system collapse." Lebanon's Central Bank Governor Riad Salameh speaks during a press conference at the bank's headquarte­rs in Beirut on November 11, 2019.

The Banque du Liban chief was recently rocked by reports that he inflated the central bank's assets by over $6 billion in 2018.

Both the Financial Times and Reuters cited audited financial accounts, and said the central bank recorded an asset that was $6.8b or about 10.27 trillion Lebanese pounds which they described as "seigniorag­e on financial stability," or a profit made by the govt when it prints money.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from Pakistan