Arab News

Lebanon extends its virus lockdown by two weeks

Prime minister attacks ‘powerless or idle’ central bank as financial woes deepen

- AP

Health Minister Hamad Hassan visited the refugee camp and urged people to wear homemade face masks if they were unable to buy medical items.

He said that Palestinia­n refugees should be aware of the seriousnes­s of the pandemic and the difficulti­es that UN refugee agencies face securing materials to deal with the outbreak. The Galilee camp, considered one of the best Palestinia­n refugee settlement­s in Lebanon, has a population of 2,165, including 1,421 refugees from Palestine and 626 Palestinia­n refugees who fled Syria.

Lebanese and Syrian families also live in the settlement, which is known as the “Danish Camp” since many of its young residents have moved to Denmark to work and obtain Danish citizenshi­p.

Meanwhile, Riad Salameh, the central bank governor, is facing growing criticism over Lebanon’s precarious financial state amid the pandemic.

On Friday, Prime Minister Hassan Diab joined the attacks on Salameh, saying that there is “a suspicious ambiguity in the performanc­e of the governor.”

Diab said that the central bank has been “powerless or idle, or has instigated the dubious deteriorat­ion” in the economy.

The Lebanese leader also revealed a “historic” decision to assign an internatio­nal company to audit the bank’s accounts.

“The data in our hands reveals that the losses in the central bank are accelerati­ng and increasing, and have increased by $7 million since the beginning of the year,” he said.

Diab failed to call for Salameh’s removal, but asked the governor to reveal “the facts” and explain the lira’s fall in value.

The prime minister also called for urgent approval of a financial plan, saying: “The longer we delay, the more difficult the financial rescue.” Hezbollah joined the campaign against Salameh, calling for public protests and a media investigat­ion into his handling of the country’s financial crisis.

Former Interior Minister Ziad Baroud said that the bank governor could only be dismissed if he breached his duties through bribery or influence peddling, or if he committed grave errors in conducting business.

Earlier Maronite Patriarch Bechara Boutros Al-Rahi warned against turning Salameh into a scapegoat for country’s financial woes.

While Lebanese authoritie­s fight to contain the epidemic, violations of the lockdown are mounting as people protest amid deteriorat­ing living conditions.

In Taalbaiya, protesters on the highway leading to Chtoura clashed with security forces on Thursday night.

Families of Lebanese students abroad staged a sit-in outside Lebanon’s central bank in protest at the Lebanese lira exchange rate, which is nearing 4,000 liras to the dollar. They demanded the adoption of the official exchange rate of 1,515 liras.

The Syndicate of Money Changers in Lebanon decided to stop trading between Friday and next Monday in protest at the “unjustifie­d deteriorat­ion of the exchange rate.”

The stoppage did not include unlicensed money changers, who continued black market operations on Friday.

One money changer was stabbed in Beirut’s southern suburbs during a dispute with a rival operator. Troops cordoned off the site of the attack while investigat­ions were carried out.

FASTFACT

Maronite Patriarch Bechara Boutros Al-Rahi has warned against turning the central bank governor into a scapegoat for Lebanon’s financial woes.

 ??  ?? A man walks down an empty street at the Galilee refugee camp in Lebanon.
A man walks down an empty street at the Galilee refugee camp in Lebanon.

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