Gulf Today

Woman grabs trapped savings from Beirut bank

-

BEIRUT: A Lebanese woman held up a Beirut bank on Wednesday and reportedly walked out with thousands of dollars to fund what she said was hospital treatment for her ill sister.

It was just the latest in a string of heists as Lebanese depositors, whose savings have been devalued and trapped in banks for almost three years, take maters into their own hands.

Sali Hafiz streamed a live video of her raid, in which she could be heard yelling at employees to release a sum of money while entrances to the bank were sealed.

“I am Sali Hafiz, I came today... to take the deposits of my sister who is dying in the hospital,” she said in the video.

“I did not come to kill anyone or to start a fire... I came to claim my rights.”

The woman instantly turned into a folk hero on social media in Lebanon, where many are desperate to access their savings and furious at a banking sector perceived as a corrupt cartel.

A second woman who appeared in the video claimed they had secured more than $13,000, while a man standing beside her carried what appeared to be stacks of banknotes wrapped in plastic.

An AFP correspond­ent at the scene said gasoline was poured inside the bank during the heist and a gun was later found on the ground, although it was not immediatel­y clear if it was real.

The correspond­ent said Hafiz and suspected accomplice­s managed to escape through a smashed window out the back before security forces arrived.

The heist lasted under an hour.

Last month, a local man received widespread sympathy ater he stormed a Beirut bank with a rifle and held employees and customers hostage for hours to demand some of his $200,000 in frozen savings to pay hospital bills for his sick father.

He was detained but switly released. In January, a bank customer held dozens of people hostage in eastern Lebanon ater he was told he could not withdraw his foreign currency savings, a source at the lender said.

Local media reported that the customer was eventually given some of his savings and surrendere­d to security forces.

Lebanon has been batered by its worst-ever economic crisis since 2019.

The local currency has lost more than 90 per cent of its value on the black market, while poverty and unemployme­nt have soared.

 ?? Agence France-presse ?? ±
The glass facade of a bank in Beirut is broken on Wednesday.
Agence France-presse ± The glass facade of a bank in Beirut is broken on Wednesday.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from Bahrain