Arab News

Lebanese PM flags up Saudi investment potential, financial ties

- Richard Wachman London

Lebanese Prime Minister Saad Al-Hariri highlighte­d the potential for strong commercial and investment ties between Lebanon and Saudi Arabia at a conference in London on Thursday.

He described his relationsh­ip with Saudi Arabia as a good one: “I believe that the Saudi market is a good market for Lebanon.

“We have prepared many agreements that we will be signing with Saudi Arabia as soon as we form an administra­tion. When we form a government, we will see Saudi Arabia taking some serious steps toward Lebanon.

Al-Hariri has been struggling to form a national unity government in Beirut since elections in May produced an inconclusi­ve result.

But he hoped a new government would be unveiled before the end of the year or early 2019.

Al-Hariri said he recognized the need for urgent reforms to rebuild Lebanon after the civil wars of 1976-90, and clashes with Israel that left many areas pulverised in 2006. “We have to do things differentl­y, we can’t go on as before,” he said.

He also spoke of the circumstan­ces that Lebanon found itself after taking in 1.5 million Syrian refugees. There was a pressing need to restore the nation’s finances after several years of GDP growth of between 1 percent and 1.5 percent.

Al-Hariri added: “We can’t tell Gulf countries to come to Lebanon (to invest) at the same time as there are political parties (in Lebanon) cursing the hell out of the Gulf. We need to move away from the regional conflicts. Lebanon is too small to pay a price in these big conflicts. Big countries can afford it. We cannot.”

Creating employment was vital for Lebanese young people, and he said that the unemployme­nt rate among refugees was 75 percent.

“We have to look outside of the box … where we can invest money, create jobs quickly.

“We want to prepare Lebanon as a platform for foreign companies to come and invest in, and make Lebanon a hub for them to take advantage of reconstruc­tion in Syria, Iraq and even Libya.”

At a recent media briefing at the World Bank’s offices in Beirut, Lebanon’s economy was described as “unsustaina­ble” by the bank’s vice president for the MENA region, Ferid BelHajj.

He said: “Lebanon has been defying gravity for quite some time”, and a day would come when

 ?? Suhail Al-Mazroueiaz­rouei ??
Suhail Al-Mazroueiaz­rouei

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