Fadlallah Says Return of $11 Billion Sent Abroad Solves Liquidity Problem

W460

MP Hasan Fadlallah of Hizbullah's Loyalty to Resistance parliamentary bloc on Thursday said the Finance Parliamentary Committee discussed ways of retrieving funds transferred abroad in violation of restrictions.

"We are talking about $11 billion," Fadlallah said, without specifying who carried out such transfers or when they took place.

If funds are retrieved "we will have liquidity and this will allow regular citizens to access their money," he added.

Central Bank Governor Riad Salameh meanwhile said he would investigate the suspected transfers.

"We will do everything permissible by law to investigate all transfers (abroad) that happened in 2019," Salameh said after taking part in the meeting of the Finance Parliamentary Committee along with caretaker Finance Minister Ali Hassan Khalil and Association of Banks chief Salim Sfeir.

"If there are suspicious funds, we will be able to find out," he told reporters.

Salameh said that there has been a lot of talk about "politicians, senior civil servants and bank owners" involved in capital flight, adding however that a probe is necessary to identify those responsible.

Faced with a grinding U.S. dollar liquidity crisis, Lebanon's banks have since September imposed increasingly tight restrictions on dollar withdrawals and transfers abroad in an attempt to conserve dwindling foreign currency reserves.

This has fueled tensions in the debt-ridden country, where a two-month-old protest movement is demanding the removal of political leaders deemed incompetent and corrupt.

Activists say ordinary depositors are footing the bill for a liquidity crisis worsened by politicians, senior civil servants and bank owners who used their influence to get their hefty savings out of the country.

Many of the country's top leaders own, or have large shares in, several banks.

As Lebanon's protest movement enters its third month, demonstrators are increasingly targeting banks for trapping their savings.

On Thursday, they staged protests outside the central bank in Hamra and near the headquarters of the Association of Banks in central Beirut.

A report by the Carnegie think tank in November said that nearly $800 million left Lebanon between October 15 and November 7, when most citizens could not access their funds because banks was closed due to protests.

As a result of informal capital controls, the unofficial value of the Lebanese pound against the dollar has dropped by around 30 percent.

The Lebanese currency has been pegged to the greenback at around 1,500 for two decades and the currencies are used interchangeably in daily life.

Responding to a question about the future of the exchange rate of the Lebanese pound on the parallel market, Salameh told reporters: "No one knows."

The comments were uncharacteristic of the central bank governor, who has repeatedly maintained that the pound is stable.

Lebanon's current economic crisis is its worst since the 1975-1990 civil war.

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

Comments 12
Thumb galaxy 26 December 2019, 18:06

"Many of the country's top leaders own, or have large shares in, several banks."

Doesn't that say it all???

Thumb gebran_sons 27 December 2019, 05:00

If Hizb pays tax on all the rockets it imports, its worldwide drug operation, its money laundering, its illegal crossings... then we'll have a surplus and pay our debt in days... the national debt resulting from hundreds of billion of economic loss due to Hizbollah wars, hatred of the west causing exodus of well-paying western firm, and armed presence subservient to foreign power making all investment impossible.

Missing ArabDemocrat.com 27 December 2019, 15:44

Capital flight is a normal process when people lose confidence in an economy. Many Arabs and Lebanese depositors use Lebanese banks as a safe haven. When they see risk to their money, they move it to safer Havens. This money cannot be brought back by Fiat degree by an obviously uninformed (or demagogue) legislator.

Missing phillipo 26 December 2019, 19:28

I wonder just how much of this sum has been sent to...........Iran.

Thumb Mystic 27 December 2019, 02:12

Every sum Hezbollah have comes from Iran, they never got anything from Lebanon.

Look to your beloved Seniora, Hariri, Gemayel, Geagea for the state money.

Thumb galaxy 27 December 2019, 10:33

Sure ya heretic! Hezbollah is planting and cultivating cannabis in Iran and not Lebanon. It controls Tehran airport and (port) and not Lebanon. It smuggles people, weapons, goods, and money through illegal crossing on the border with Iran and not Syria. Its weapons brought a corrupt president and his son in law in Sri Lanka to power and not Lebanon.

Typical iranian blinded argument.

Missing thatisit 26 December 2019, 22:20

Stop the illegal arms and a state within a state. Pay your taxes and stop controlling the port, the airport and other crossings. Stop the illegal hirings off Berri and his likes and REMOVE the minister of finance and replace him with a person of integrity m and we will see how things will change to the better.

Missing thatisit 26 December 2019, 22:20

Stop the illegal arms and a state within a state. Pay your taxes and stop controlling the port, the airport and other crossings. Stop the illegal hirings off Berri and his likes and REMOVE the minister of finance and replace him with a person of integrity m and we will see how things will change to the better.

Thumb Machia 26 December 2019, 23:24

Our whole system is bankrupt and the country will fall apart and mini states will rise. It is the end of Lebanon.

Thumb Machia 26 December 2019, 23:25

Help your parents back home by sending them cash or plane tickets.

Thumb thepatriot 27 December 2019, 12:10

Machia, I actually kind of agree with you. We are at the beggining of the end of Lebanon as we know it I believe.
In order to solve our Economical Issue, we need an injection of at least 35 Billion Dollars to restructure our Debt.
Seeing the actual geopolitical situation that we are living, no other state will be willing to Help us.
The Saudis have cash shortage due to the low price of oil, and have no more allies in Lebanon. As we know it, MBS is not fond of Hariri who is himself out of the picture. The 11 Billion promissed by Cedre will never see the light. In the opening stetement of this conference, it is clearly stated that 1701 will need to be applied, and militias shall give away their weapons. Not gonna happen. Iran is broke and under sanctions. We are alone. Some would think that oil exploration might help us. But this exploration will take years.

Thumb thepatriot 27 December 2019, 12:11

And we are getting back only 30% of the findings. The rest covers the costs and commission of Total. So, no fresh money is comming to the rescue. We will enter a cicle of poverty. The Lira will loose value vs the Us Dollar even more, and the country will fall apart. After that, all scenarios are possible, and no one can predict beyond this point what will happen, but mini states ruled in autarky is a possibility.