Gulf News

Protesters get haircuts to send message to central bank of Lebanon

Demonstrat­ors want economic measures to draw money from the ‘corrupt’ rich

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ebanese anti-government protesters lined up for free haircuts outside the central bank in Beirut on Wednesday in a symbolic plea to make the rich pay and help rescue an economy in freefall.

“We’re here to teach them what a good haircut looks like,” said 34-year-old Rebecca Saade, waiting for a volunteer barber to snip away at her short brown hair.

She was among dozens of activists to have their locks trimmed in the latest of a wave of colourful protests to sweep the small Mediterran­ean country since October 17.

“The economic crisis is what pushed us into the revolution,” said masters student Racha, 24, drinking a coffee after she spent a chilly night in a tent outside the bank building.

Lebanese of all political and religious background­s have taken to the streets, angered by poor governance and corruption as well as by an economic downturn, bank closures and a dollar shortage that sparked mass capital flight.

Amid the turmoil, the government resigned on October 29, but the bitterly divided leadership has since failed to agree on the new cabinet desperatel­y needed to implement economic reforms.

Protesters demand that measures to redress the economy do not unduly impact the poor but instead draw money from the richest, many of whom they accuse of corruption.

“It has to be done to the top financiers who have benefitted from corruption until now,” Saade said just before sitting under a black barber’s cape.

“The haircut should not be on us, especially since in the first few weeks they let all the biggest depositors take out all their capital,” she said.

Around her, dozens waved flags and chanted, seeking to grab the attention of the central bank chief, whose stencilled portrait with devil’s horns had been spray-painted onto a nearby wall.

Economic downturn

The World Bank says about a third of Lebanese live in poverty, and that this could soon rise to half.

Lebanon also has a yawning wealth gap, according to the World Inequality Database.

The top one per cent of the population control nearly 25 per cent of national income, while the bottom half have little more than 10 per cent.

The recent unrest has accelerate­d the downturn and sent the economy into “freefall”, according to Maha Yahya, director of think tank the Carnegie Middle East.

Debt-saddled Lebanon has had a liquidity crisis since September, with banks rationing the supply of dollars.

As a result, the exchange rate in the parallel market has shot up from the pegged rate of 1,507 pounds to the greenback to more than 2,000.

Fear of financial collapse drove capital flight, experts said in a Carnegie Middle East paper this month.

Some $800 million (Dh2.94 billion) appeared to have left the country from October 15 to November 7, a period during which the banks were mostly closed.

‘Bridge trust gap’

Parliament speaker Nabih Berri on Wednesday called for the money moved abroad to be returned, the National News Agency said.

Meanwhile, Lebanon still lacks a functionin­g government. Outgoing prime minister Saad Hariri had said on Tuesday that he would not head the next government — in a move that is intended to speed up formation of the Cabinet.

Protesters want a government made up only of technocrat­s and not affiliated to any of the traditiona­l political parties.

“Right now we really need someone whose speciality is the economy,” one protester said.

Analyst Yahya said that in order to revive the economy, any new Cabinet would have to “bridge the trust gap with the internatio­nal community — but more importantl­y, with the [Lebanese] street”.

We’re here to teach them [the rich and corrupt] what a good haircut looks like. The haircut should not be on us, especially since in the first few weeks they let all the biggest depositors take out all their capital.” Rebecca Saade

| Protester

 ?? AFP ?? A Lebanese protester places a mask of Lebanon’s Central Bank Governor Riad Salameh as she sits for a haircut in front of the central bank headquarte­rs in Beirut.
AFP A Lebanese protester places a mask of Lebanon’s Central Bank Governor Riad Salameh as she sits for a haircut in front of the central bank headquarte­rs in Beirut.

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