Lebanon's Central Bank Tells Banks to Pay Students Abroad

Lebanon's central bank asked domestic banks to comply with a new law allowing students abroad to transfer dollars out of Lebanon. (Reuters)
Lebanon's central bank asked domestic banks to comply with a new law allowing students abroad to transfer dollars out of Lebanon. (Reuters)
TT

Lebanon's Central Bank Tells Banks to Pay Students Abroad

Lebanon's central bank asked domestic banks to comply with a new law allowing students abroad to transfer dollars out of Lebanon. (Reuters)
Lebanon's central bank asked domestic banks to comply with a new law allowing students abroad to transfer dollars out of Lebanon. (Reuters)

Lebanon's central bank asked domestic banks on Wednesday to comply with a new law allowing students abroad to transfer dollars out of Lebanon as they struggle to pay daily expenses without access to their money.

Thousands of university students around the world have been caught up in Lebanon's financial meltdown, which has paralyzed the banking system since last year.

As the currency crashed, banks blocked transfers, severely restricted withdrawals and cut card spending limits abroad down to a few dollars a month.

To pile pressure on commercial banks, some parents have protested repeatedly outside the central bank, asking to be allowed to send their own funds to their children studying in Russia, Europe and elsewhere.

The Lebanese parliament passed a law in October allowing students abroad to transfer $10,000 out at the official peg, far below the street rate. But students and their parents have complained that the decision has so far been ignored.

In Wednesday's circular, the central bank said banks should provide the hard currency from their accounts at foreign correspondent banks.

It also said depositors who benefit from this should agree to the lifting of bank secrecy on the transaction to try to prevent people from using several different banks to make more than one dollar transfer.



Israeli Military Says it Has Killed 250 Hezbollah Fighters in Ground Operation

Smoke and destruction at the site of the airstrike that targeted Hashem Safieddine late Thursday night (AFP)
Smoke and destruction at the site of the airstrike that targeted Hashem Safieddine late Thursday night (AFP)
TT

Israeli Military Says it Has Killed 250 Hezbollah Fighters in Ground Operation

Smoke and destruction at the site of the airstrike that targeted Hashem Safieddine late Thursday night (AFP)
Smoke and destruction at the site of the airstrike that targeted Hashem Safieddine late Thursday night (AFP)

The Israeli military estimates it has killed around 250 Hezbollah fighters, including a number of battalion and company commanders, since the start of its ground operation in Lebanon earlier this week, a military spokesperson said on Friday, Reuters reported.

Lieutenant Colonel Nadav Shoshani said the military was still assessing the damage caused by airstrikes in southern Beirut on Thursday night, which he said targeted Hezbollah's intelligence headquarters.

Hezbollah has not publicly provided any death toll.

The southern suburb of Dahiye came under renewed strikes near midnight on Thursday after Israel ordered people to leave their homes in some areas, residents and security sources said.

The air raids targeted Hezbollah official Hashem Safieddine, rumored successor to its assassinated leader Hassan Nasrallah, in an underground bunker, Axios reporter Barak Ravid said on X, citing three Israeli officials.

Safieddine's fate was not clear, he said.