Arab News

Protesters storm Beirut bank as fears over economy mount

- Najia Houssari Beirut

Widespread anger at Lebanese banking restrictio­ns boiled over on Saturday when dozens of protesters stormed a Beirut branch following its refusal to deliver employees’ salaries in US dollars. The protest group, made up mainly of Communist Party members, occupied the BLC bank’s Hamra branch and staged a sit-in over what they described as “the false practices of the banks.” Lebanon’s banks have imposed weekly limits on withdrawal­s of US dollars amid a shortage in liquidity as the country grapples with its worst economic and financial crisis in more than three decades.

The restrictio­ns have added to mounting anger over job layoffs, salary cuts and rapidly rising prices.

The Communist Party later issued a statement saying that the sit-in resulted in “all customers receiving their money and deposits, which confirms the false practices of the banks, as the administra­tion claimed that the dollar was not available inside the branch, which turned out to be untrue.”

On Thursday, protesters staged a sit-in outside the central bank and the Lebanese Banks’ Associatio­n building in protest against the banks’ policies amid unpreceden­ted capital controls.

Banks’ strict controls on releasing hard currency have added to the liquidity crisis on top of an economic downturn. Meanwhile, attempts to form a national salvation government stalled after a number of Sunni political figures refused to accept ministeria­l positions in the leadership. The Future Movement, the largest Sunni parliament­ary bloc, is boycotting attempts to establish a new government.

Nasser Yassin, acting director of the Issam Fares Institute for Public Policy and Internatio­nal Affairs at the American University of Beirut, told Arab News that he had rejected a request to take up a ministeria­l position.

Yassin described the portfolio as a “suicide mission.”

“I am not enthusiast­ic in the current circumstan­ces,” he said. Yassin said the offer of a ministeria­l position “has nothing to do with the representa­tion of the movement, but rather because I am a Sunni figure, in light of other people refusing to participat­e in the government.”

He said: “The parties that have held power for decades lack any idea of justice and human rights. Nothing will change unless these politician­s are removed from power and replaced by a new academic generation armed with new concepts that prevent them from using power to enrich themselves and exert influence.”

 ?? AP ?? Anti-government protesters in Beirut, Lebanon, reinstall a new large cardboard fist labeled ‘Revolution’ in Martyr’s Square.
AP Anti-government protesters in Beirut, Lebanon, reinstall a new large cardboard fist labeled ‘Revolution’ in Martyr’s Square.

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