Gulf Today

Aoun wants inquiry into currency crash

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BEIRUT: Lebanon’s president ordered the central bank governor to open an investigat­ion into currency speculatio­n, ater the Lebanese pound plunged to record lows on the black market this week.

The request by President Michel Aoun came ater the country’s banks were required to raise their capital holdings by Feb. 28, and local media reported that some had to scramble to get hard currency from the black market, sending demand for it — and its prices — surging.

While officially the US dollar costs only 1,520 Lebanese pounds, the black market price was around 9,900 pounds on Wednesday — a day ater briefly hiting a record high of 10,000.

Just a few months earlier, dollars could be bought at a rate of some 7,000 pounds per dollar. The currency drop led to protests across the country.

In a statement released by his office ater meeting central bank governor Riad Salameh, Aoun said if it turns out that the crash was because of speculator­s, they should face justice.

Enraged protesters, angry over the higher costs of dollar denominate­d goods, have blocked roads and highways with burning tires across the country.

Lebanon’s banking associatio­n denied it was responsibl­e for the situation, blaming instead a lingering political impasse, pileups of unpaid state contracts and household dollar hoarding.

Bickering between Lebanon’s political rivals has let the country in a stalemate for months, only worsening the economic disaster sparked by a debt crisis and sovereign default last year. Disagreeme­nts between Aoun and Prime Minister-designate Saad Hariri have delayed the formation of the government for more than four months.

Lebanon has been hit by one crisis ater another, with widespread protests against the country’s corrupt political class breaking out in October 2019.

That has been compounded by the coronaviru­s pandemic and a massive blast in Beirut’s port last August that decimated the facility.

The country desperatel­y needs foreign currency, but internatio­nal donors want major anticorrup­tion reforms first, lest the funds disappear into a notorious state sector sinkhole that has brought the nation to the brink of bankruptcy.

The crisis has driven nearly half the population of the small country of 6 million into poverty. Over 1 million refugees from Syria live in Lebanon.

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People stand outside a shop in Bourj Hammoud, Lebanon, on Wednesday.
Reuters ↑ People stand outside a shop in Bourj Hammoud, Lebanon, on Wednesday.

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