Arab News

Yemeni rial bounces back as central bank restructur­ed

Reshuffle in the administra­tive board seen must for reforms

- Saeed Al-Batati Al-Mukalla

The Yemeni rial recovered on Tuesday by roughly 30 percent hours after the Yemeni president reshuffled the country’s central bank board in a bid to rein in the rapid currency devaluatio­n.

Local money-changers told Arab News that the Yemeni rial began bouncing back on Monday night when President Abed Rabbo Mansour Hadi dismissed the governor of the Aden-based central bank and his deputy.

By Tuesday morning, the Yemeni currency rose from 1,700 to 1,100 against the dollar before dropping again to 1,250 in the afternoon.

The rial has rapidly tumbled during the past couple of weeks, reaching a historic record low of 1,750 this week, compared to 215 in early 2015. Yemen’s president appointed Ahmed bin Ahmed Ghaleb as the new governor and head of the central bank’s administra­tive board. Mohammed Omer Banaja was appointed his deputy.

The official news agency reported that the president authorized the Central Agency for Control and Accountabi­lity to monitor the bank’s current and previous financial activities.

Four previous central bank chiefs, all appointed Hadi, failed to prevent the rial’s plunge despite their expertise and strong educationa­l background­s.

The central bank had closed

dozens of exchange firms and shops that violated the bank’s monetary rules and were involved in speculativ­e activities on foreign currency. The central bank also ordered banks in the Houthi-controlled areas to move offices and operations to Aden, or face punitive measures and provided fuel and food importers with dollars. The rial continued losing value against the dollar, as several blackliste­d firms and banks continued operations in the Houthi-controlled Sanaa.

Mustafa Nasr, director of the Economic Media Center, has urged local and internatio­nal support to the bank’s new administra­tion to succeed in putting into place economic policies and also demanded resuming the flow of oil and gas exports and reviving money-generating state bodies.

Richard Oppenheim, British ambassador to Yemen, said the reshuffle of the bank’s administra­tive board would help the Yemeni government carry out vital reforms to steady the economy.

 ?? AFP/File ?? The rial has rapidly tumbled during the past couple of weeks, reaching a historic record low of 1,750 this week, compared to 215 in early 2015.
AFP/File The rial has rapidly tumbled during the past couple of weeks, reaching a historic record low of 1,750 this week, compared to 215 in early 2015.

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