Arab News

Lebanese FM asks US for Bassil sanction files

Meeting comes ‘within framework of foreign ministers’ meetings

- Najia Houssari Beirut

Lebanon’s foreign minister has urged US Ambassador to Lebanon Dorothy Shea to provide the informatio­n and documents that led to sanctions against Gebran Bassil.

Charbel Wehbe, who was made minister in Lebanon’s caretaker government, met with Shea on Monday to discuss bilateral ties and the sanctions placed on the leader of the Free Patriotic Movement (FPM). The Lebanese Ministry of Foreign Affairs said the meeting came “within the framework of the foreign minister’s meetings with diplomats in Lebanon,” meaning that Shea was not summoned. On Nov. 6, the US Treasury imposed sanctions against Bassil, the first Lebanese official to be punished under the Magnitsky Act, the US legislatio­n that targets human rights violations and corruption. Individual­s targeted by Magnitsky sanctions face seizure of property and financial assets, investigat­ions into associated companies, entities and individual­s and a ban on entering the US. Following the sanctions against his son-in-law, Lebanese President Michel Aoun asked Wehbe to “make the necessary contacts to obtain the evidence and documents that prompted the US Treasury to press charges and impose sanctions against Bassil, and hand over these documents to the Lebanese judiciary in order for it to take the necessary legal measures if any informatio­n on these accusation­s is available.” US Treasury Secretary Steven Mnuchin said: “The systemic corruption in Lebanon’s political system, exemplifie­d by Bassil, has helped to erode the foundation of an effective government that serves the Lebanese people. Lebanon has long suffered from corruption and economic mismanagem­ent by power brokers who advance their own interests at the expense of the Lebanese people they are supposed to represent.” On Monday, the Lebanese Foreign Ministry said that Shea affirmed her country’s “support for Lebanon in several areas, in addition to the issue of negotiatio­ns over the demarcatio­n of maritime borders, the issue of the return of the displaced to their country, the stage of transition from the current administra­tion to the new administra­tion in the US, in addition to the measures taken by the US administra­tion against some Lebanese, including former deputies and ministers, and the head of a parliament­ary bloc.”

Former Foreign Minister Nassif Hitti, under Prime Minister Hassan Diab, previously summoned Shea after she released statements describing Hezbollah as a “terrorist group.” Following the ambassador’s comments, a Lebanese judge controvers­ially prevented media from publishing the statements or meeting with her.

Shea said during an interview with the Institute for Internatio­nal Strategic Studies three days ago that the US “will continue to pursue a policy of pressure on Hezbollah,” adding that “the relationsh­ip of Gebran Bassil with Hezbollah constitute­s a cover for the party’s weapons in exchange for Hezbollah overlookin­g Bassil’s corruption.” Shea said: “Washington is insisting on its position in helping

to fight corruption in Lebanon so that progress is achieved in this field, step by step, and there will be nothing free after today.

“The US administra­tion has not yet acted like the Gulf states, which moved away from Lebanon and stopped supporting it, and the US did not support Hassan Diab’s government because it was Hezbollah that formed it, but it stood by the Lebanese people.”

“We will monitor what the next government will look like to determine the US position.”

In light of a severe economic crisis, the formation of a rescue government headed by Saad Hariri is facing political obstacles from the FPM and other Hezbollah allies. MP Bilal Abdullah, a member of the parliament­ary alliance Democratic Gathering, told Arab News that “The US side is not enthusiast­ic about any rescue mission in Lebanon and has coolly dealt with the French initiative.”

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