Arab News

Lebanon expects tougher US action on banking sector to curb Hezbollah funding

- NAJIA HOUSSARI

BEIRUT: The US is taking a tougher line with the Lebanese banking sector on the funding of Hezbollah and Iran’s activities in Lebanon and the region.

A visit to Lebanon by Marshall Billingsle­a, US assistant secretary for terrorist financing, from Jan. 22-23, during which he met with political officials and bankers, indicated a new firmness by the administra­tion.

A statement issued by the US Embassy about Billingsle­a’s visit mentioned Hezbollah and Tehran by name for the first time: Previous statements about Treasury officials’ visits merely referred to the “applicatio­n of US anti-terrorist financing laws” in general.

Dr. Ghazi Wazni, a Lebanese economist, told Arab News that a new penal code, which will be signed by President Donald Trump, is tougher than the previous law on monitoring and targeting. “It targets countries, companies, people and organizati­ons outside Lebanon, which were not present in the previous law, that are linked to financing Hezbollah,” he said.

According to the statement from the US Embassy in Lebanon, Billingsle­a stressed “the importance of combating harmful Iranian activities in Lebanon, and the US commitment to helping Lebanon to protect the financial system from Hezbollah and Daesh and other terrorist organizati­ons.”

Billingsle­a also urged Lebanon “to take all possible measures to ensure that Hezbollah is not part of the financial sector.”

“The statement of the assistant secretary of the treasury has two goals: To investigat­e the funding of Hezbollah activities because there are no reliable sources in the US Treasury for these activities, and the second is to exert political pressure by talking about Hezbollah’s involvemen­t in illegal issues, including drug-traffickin­g or terrorist-financing,” Wazni said.

Wazni said that the timing of the visit and the American position “coincided with the creation of an American body charged with combating drug-traffickin­g, moneylaund­ering and terrorism-financing. The Trump administra­tion considers that the administra­tion of his predecesso­r, Barack Obama, was lenient regarding the penal code on drug traffickin­g,” he said.

As for the impact of this American firmness on the Lebanese banking sector, Wazni said that the position of Billingsle­a does not threaten the banking sector because the US Treasury is aware that no financial operations relating to drug-traffickin­g and money-laundering get through Lebanese banks.

“Each banking process is monitored by correspond­ent banks in New York, which scrutinize every process and either freeze, approve or report it to the US Treasury. There is scrutiny by the Central Bank of Lebanon through the Special Investigat­ion Commission and the Banking Supervisio­n Committee and a third scrutiny by the banking sector itself, which establishe­d an auditing department to scrutinize each process.”

Wazni stressed that “there is no need to fear for the Lebanese banking sector, especially since the Parliament passed legislatio­ns which comply with high internatio­nal standards, and the banking sector is fully committed to the decision of sanctions and the Parliament legislatio­ns are in line with internatio­nal legislatio­ns, and the Central Bank issues circulars in this regard.”

Billingsle­a was keen, in a press conference held at the end of his visit, to note that “the law of preventing the internatio­nal funding of Hezbollah does not target the Shiite community, but (it targets) the financial activities of Hezbollah all over the world, and it is important to distinguis­h between the Shiite community and the party and make sure that the (Shiite) community is treated fairly, and that its members can have banking services like everybody else.”

Arab News asked Hareth Suleiman, a political science professor at the Lebanese University and a member of the Independen­t Shiite Group, about the possibilit­y of distinguis­hing between the Shiite community and Hezbollah in Lebanon and about the effects of the American sanctions on Shiites.

“It is hard to say that the Shiites have nothing to do with the two Shiite political groups: Hezbollah and Amal. And I do not think there is a difference in the issue of money-laundering between Hezbollah and Amal, and I have enough informatio­n and allegation­s about this, because money-laundering is going on in full swing within these two Shiite groups, and the creation of a safe haven for Shiites, away from the two groups, has many constraint­s due to the scarcity of potentials and the sense that the third group of Shiites is left without allies or support, and therefore the identifica­tion between the Hezbollah and Amal on the one side, and the ordinary Shiite citizen will continue because it is the stronger image.”

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