Arab News

Lebanon approves first state budget in 12 years

- NAJIA HOUSSARY

BEIRUT: Lebanon’s Parliament has approved the 2017 state budget, the first in 12 years.

The approval is “a real accomplish­ment resulting from a political consensus,” economic expert Issam Al-Jurdi told Arab News.

“It will show the whole world that today, the Lebanese state is solid and its institutio­ns have actually begun functionin­g,” he said.

“The political crisis — which has paralyzed and divided the country for years, and harmed it politicall­y, economical­ly and socially — was solved by a one-year deadline to audit the past 12 years of extrabudge­tary spending,” he added.

“I think this deadline will be renewed, and the auditing accounts will remain an instrument of pressure whenever political tensions are exacerbate­d,” Al-Jurdi said.

“People warn us that we would face the same fate as Greece, but our condition is far worse… because in Greece, the people hold the government accountabl­e for all its actions. The Greeks overthrew three government­s a year after the crisis began. In Lebanon, who dares to question a minister who belongs to a political party?”

During Wednesday’s parliament­ary session, Prime Minister Saad Al-Hariri urged lawmakers to “seize the opportunit­y of approving the new state budget, to renew trust among the Lebanese people and work together for our nation’s interest.”

He criticized some politician­s “who attempted to divert Parliament’s attention from studying the important state budget, and… to score illusive victories.”

Al-Hariri added: “If the law was violated in the past years in the absence of a state budget, today we stand here in Parliament to put an end to those violations, to respect and abide by legal and constituti­onal timeframes, and to start preparing the draft law of the 2018 state budget according to an economic, administra­tive, financial and developmen­tal vision.”

Economic expert Dr. Louis Hobeika said: “Despite the delay, it’s a positive step that will show the whole world that Lebanon is making real progress.”

But he cautioned: “An $11-billion amount was spent in the past years with no auditing reports. This issue, which was behind many political tensions, was dropped, as some deputies said during the parliament­ary session that it couldn’t be solved.”

Hobeika added: “Despite the fact that the discussion­s were shallow, they aimed to remind people of the deputies’ presence as they’ve extended their own term three times in a row, and the next elections will be held soon.”

Thirty-five deputies discussed the state budget. The Lebanese Forces MP accused Banque Du Liban (BDL) Gov. Riad Salameh of “failing to submit yearly budget reports for 20 years.”

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Cherie Blair

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