Muscat Daily

Lebanon banks ‘trapping’ state salaries: Minister

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Beirut, Lebanon - Lebanon’s caretaker Finance Minister accused the country’s banks on Tuesday of ‘trapping’ civil servants’ salaries with withdrawal limits that have fuelled public anger in the crisis-stricken country.

‘What is happening in some Lebanese banks is unacceptab­le,’ Ali Hassan Khalil wrote on Twitter.

‘They are trapping the salaries of [state] employees that are transferre­d by the Finance Ministry every month.’

Rocked by two months of anti-government protests and a political deadlock, Lebanon is also facing its worst economic crisis since the 1975-1990 civil war. A liquidity crunch has pushed Lebanese banks to impose capital controls on dollar accounts, capping withdrawal­s at around US$1,000 a month. Some have imposed even tighter restrictio­ns.

Some have also capped weekly withdrawal­s of the Lebanese pound at 1mn - the equivalent of US$660 at official rates - even as the currency has plunged by nearly a third against the dollar on the black market in recent weeks.

The tightening controls have prompted public uproar, with many accusing banks of robbing them of their savings.

On Tuesday, Khalil said it was a ‘sacred right’ of civil servants to be paid in full and on time.

‘It is not permissibl­e for this right to be violated,’ he said, vowing legal action to ensure public servants can access their salaries in full.

At banks in the northern city of Tripoli, tensions soared on Tuesday as clients struggled to withdraw their salaries, said an AFP correspond­ent there.

A fight broke out in a branch near the city’s main protest camp after the bank refused to let a customer withdraw dollars.

An anti-government street movement has rocked the country since October 17. Bowing to popular pressure, the government resigned two weeks into demonstrat­ions.

Since then, a potential default on Lebanon’s huge public debt has heightened the economic and political crisis.

The faltering economy has pushed many companies into bankruptcy, while others have laid off staff and slashed salaries.

A recession of more than 0.2 per cent is expected for this year, the World Bank says.

In its first step towards form

A liquidity crunch has pushed Lebanese banks to impose capital controls on dollar accounts, capping withdrawal­s at around US$1,000 a month

ing an urgently-needed government, President Michel Aoun last week designated engineerin­g professor Hassan Diab as the country’s next Prime Minister, replacing Saad Hariri who quit in late October in the face of mass protests.

 ??  ?? Ali Hassan Khalil
Ali Hassan Khalil

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