Khaleej Times

Blame Hezbollah for Lebanon’s misery

- HUSSEIN SHOBOKSHI Hussein Shobokshi is Saudi journalist and businessma­n. He is also a member of the Board of Directors of the Shobokshi Company for Developmen­t and Trade. —Asharq Al Awsat

Among the most important reasons why Lebanon was called the Switzerlan­d of the East was the picturesqu­e nature that made it a distinguis­hed and exceptiona­l tourist destinatio­n, the atmosphere of freedoms that made it a centre for artistic, journalist­ic, and literary creativity, and a developed banking system that was safeguarde­d by the law and guaranteed secrecy and financial oversight.

Today, this tourism sector is collapsing, with services deteriorat­ing, capital flight, and freedoms being restricted to an unpreceden­ted degree that is not typical for the nature of Lebanon. The collapse of the banking system in Lebanon today is only a matter of time and the issue here is not only banks going bankrupt but a total loss of trust in the banking system.

A few days ago, a well-known Jordanian businessma­n, Talal AbuGhazale­h sued one of the largest Lebanese banks for money wasting and fraud — a dangerous precedent. This is neither the first nor the last case of this kind, and there will probably be a flood of cases of the same nature filed by those harmed. This is not the first crisis that the Lebanese banking sector has faced; there was a months-long crisis related to Intra Bank and its founder, Palestinia­n banker Yousef Beidas. This crisis continued with Roger Tamraz. The issue has been dealt with extensivel­y in two books by Canadian-Lebanese writer Kamal Dib.

Lebanese banks played a very controvers­ial role during the bloody civil war that went on for more than two decades, acting as a tool that enabled warlords, heads of sects, and those in power. With that, Lebanon’s

status as a centre for the production of banks in the Middle East was lost, pushing internatio­nal banks to move from Beirut to Bahrain that had provided an alternativ­e system that was supported by a strong banking law and a stable central bank.

After the civil war, the banking sector in Lebanon was more dangerousl­y and severely infiltrate­d, with many of them turning into containers for suspicious and dirty money for the terrorist organisati­on Hezbollah and the Assad regime and its agents. This opened the way for funding drug deals and smuggling, as well as arms deals, chemical

waste deals, and other corrupt deals, leading to the collapse of many banks, such as the Medina Bank and the Lebanese Canadian Bank, among others. The Lebanese banking sector did not only turn a blind eye to suspicious accounts but also to bank accounts affiliated with well-known and very large companies that were known to be fronts for Hezbollah’s money laundering from West Africa, Iran, and Latin

America through a complicate­d network of supporters and affiliates of the terrorist group.

This total loss of trust in the Lebanese banking sector, one of the most important soft elements of Lebanese power, is a very grave loss that will be difficult to compensate after years of strengthen­ing and constructi­on. Hence, the propositio­ns by Hezbollah leader, Hassan Nasrallah, on economic and financial solutions is comical. However, Nasrallah is walking down the same path that he had since his first day: Destroying the Lebanese model in all its features and characteri­stics only to replace it with an ugly mutant that looks nothing like Lebanon.

The banking sector is strong, and it is one of the most important pillars of the modern state, the most important element of this is trust in the system, which has quite obviously evaporated. The collapse of the economic and financial excellence in Lebanon is not a coincidenc­e, and impoverish­ing people was an inevitable, natural, and expected result of this malicious project that was promoted by the terrorist organizati­on, Hezbollah, since its conception, only those in denial would be surprised.

The Lebanese scene and its implicatio­ns that are expected to become worse will not change unless the roots of the problem are addressed and Lebanon returns to what it was because Switzerlan­d itself did not reach glory under the leadership of the head of a terrorist organisati­on.

The collapse of the economic and financial excellence in Lebanon is not a coincidenc­e, and impoverish­ing people was an inevitable, natural, and expected result of this malicious project that was promoted by the terrorist organisati­on, Hezbollah.

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