Lebanon’s Sfeir Seeks Cabinet with Practical Expertise

FILE - People wearing face masks stand outside the damaged entrance of the Association of Banks, in Beirut, Lebanon, Aug. 21, 2020. Reuters
FILE - People wearing face masks stand outside the damaged entrance of the Association of Banks, in Beirut, Lebanon, Aug. 21, 2020. Reuters
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Lebanon’s Sfeir Seeks Cabinet with Practical Expertise

FILE - People wearing face masks stand outside the damaged entrance of the Association of Banks, in Beirut, Lebanon, Aug. 21, 2020. Reuters
FILE - People wearing face masks stand outside the damaged entrance of the Association of Banks, in Beirut, Lebanon, Aug. 21, 2020. Reuters

Lebanon's next government needs ministers with practical experience in finance and other areas to restore confidence in the collapsing economy, the head of the banking association, Salim Sfeir, said.

"The most important step is to reestablish confidence," Sfeir, chairman of the Association of Banks in Lebanon (ABL), told Reuters on Tuesday at the headquarters of Bank of Beirut, which he also heads.

Sfeir spoke after the latest bid to form a cabinet fell apart last week.

Banks have faced a crisis since last year after political unrest, slowing remittances and a foreign exchange liquidity crunch left the state struggling to finance a mountain of debt.

Depositors have been frozen out of their dollar savings.

Adding to Lebanon's woes, the government quit after a huge port blast on Aug. 4 that devastated a swathe of Beirut. Efforts to form a new cabinet of non-partisan, specialist ministers have stumbled amid sectarian politics.

"All will depend on the new government and the expertise that its members will have," Sfeir said in his office, where glass shattered in the blast had only just been replaced.

The central bank has told banks to recapitalize and provision for losses on Lebanese Eurobond holdings, as well urging them to repatriate cash sent abroad by big depositors.

Sfeir said a central bank circular requested repatriated funds be blocked for five years, offering liquidity to support the private sector. The funds would be placed in a correspondent bank abroad not with Lebanon's central bank, he added.

He said the "ultimate target" was to secure the return of $4 billion to $5 billion.

France, which is leading international efforts to help Lebanon, has drawn up a policy roadmap, including implementing a capital control law approved by the International Monetary Fund.

Paris has said banks might have to accept that depositors would lose money, via what is called a "haircut" on deposits.

Sfeir said banks remained opposed. "The easiest formula is to have a haircut, but a haircut will create for you a social problem," he said.

Proposals by banks include setting up a fund to hold $40 billion in state assets to offer a guarantee to depositors.

"The state fund objective is to establish confidence as fast as possible to whoever is skeptical about the repayment of the deposits," Sfeir said, adding assets could still remain in state hands with income generated offering liquidity.



Palestinians Must Not Be Expelled from Gaza, Berlin Says After Trump Comments 

Internally displaced Palestinians make their way from southern to northern Gaza along Al-Rashid road, central Gaza Strip, 27 January 2025. (EPA)
Internally displaced Palestinians make their way from southern to northern Gaza along Al-Rashid road, central Gaza Strip, 27 January 2025. (EPA)
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Palestinians Must Not Be Expelled from Gaza, Berlin Says After Trump Comments 

Internally displaced Palestinians make their way from southern to northern Gaza along Al-Rashid road, central Gaza Strip, 27 January 2025. (EPA)
Internally displaced Palestinians make their way from southern to northern Gaza along Al-Rashid road, central Gaza Strip, 27 January 2025. (EPA)

The Palestinian population must not be expelled from Gaza, the German foreign ministry said on Monday after US President Donald Trump said Jordan and Egypt should take in Palestinians.

Asked for a reaction to Trump's comments, a foreign ministry spokesperson said Berlin shared the view of "the European Union, our Arab partners, the United Nations ... that the Palestinian population must not be expelled from Gaza and Gaza must not be permanently occupied or recolonized by Israel."

Jordan is already home to several million Palestinians, while tens of thousands live in Egypt. Both countries and other Arab nations reject the idea of Palestinians in Gaza being moved to their countries. Gaza is land that Palestinians would want as part of a future Palestinian state.