Lebanon Bank Customers to Regain Access to up to $800 a Month

The Banque du Liban, the central bank of Lebanon, is seen as protests against the government continue in Beirut, Lebanon January 14, 2020. (Reuters)
The Banque du Liban, the central bank of Lebanon, is seen as protests against the government continue in Beirut, Lebanon January 14, 2020. (Reuters)
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Lebanon Bank Customers to Regain Access to up to $800 a Month

The Banque du Liban, the central bank of Lebanon, is seen as protests against the government continue in Beirut, Lebanon January 14, 2020. (Reuters)
The Banque du Liban, the central bank of Lebanon, is seen as protests against the government continue in Beirut, Lebanon January 14, 2020. (Reuters)

Lebanon's central bank on Friday said depositors with accounts active as of October 2019 would be able to withdraw up to $400 a month plus the equivalent amount in local currency, marking a significant concession after a chaotic two days in Lebanese banking.

Lebanese banks had locked depositors out of their dollar accounts and blocked transfers abroad since the country was gripped by a financial crisis in late 2019.

Under a central bank circular issued last year, depositors were permitted to withdraw funds from their dollar accounts, paid in the local currency, but only at a rate of 3,900 pounds to the greenback.

That rate is only about a third of the value of dollars on the black market - which on Friday traded at upwards of 13,000 pounds to the dollar - but it has been the only way many Lebanese have been able to access their funds.

When the circular was issued last year Lebanon's black market rate was around half of what it is now. Lebanese account holders who withdraw at the 3,900 pounds rate are now taking a loss of about 70% on their funds and there have been calls for the central bank to raise the rate.

Friday's decision to grant depositors up to $800, with the exchange rate calculated at close to market value, follows a chaotic two days in the financial sector.

Details of the decision, which will take effect from July 1, will be issued later and will apply to the value of accounts as they stood at the end of March 2021, the bank said in a statement.

On Wednesday night the central bank had issued a statement saying it would stop allowing withdrawals at the fixed rate of 3,900 without elaborating.

It quickly back-pedalled on Thursday after protests erupted and the governor of the central bank reassured depositors that it was not bankrupt and people's deposits were safe and would be returned.



Muscat Hosts New Round of Yemeni Consultations for Release of Prisoners

The delegation of the Yemeni government and the joint negotiating team of the coalition countries before the start of consultations with the Houthi group on Sunday in Muscat (Asharq Al-Awsat)
The delegation of the Yemeni government and the joint negotiating team of the coalition countries before the start of consultations with the Houthi group on Sunday in Muscat (Asharq Al-Awsat)
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Muscat Hosts New Round of Yemeni Consultations for Release of Prisoners

The delegation of the Yemeni government and the joint negotiating team of the coalition countries before the start of consultations with the Houthi group on Sunday in Muscat (Asharq Al-Awsat)
The delegation of the Yemeni government and the joint negotiating team of the coalition countries before the start of consultations with the Houthi group on Sunday in Muscat (Asharq Al-Awsat)

Under the auspices of the office of the UN envoy to Yemen, Hans Grundberg, and the International Committee of the Red Cross, Muscat hosted on Sunday consultations between the internationally-recognized Yemeni government and the Houthi group over the exchange of prisoners, detainees and forcibly disappeared persons.
Majed Fadael, Undersecretary of the Ministry of Human Rights and the official spokesman for the government delegation, expected that the consultations would continue for about 10 days.
In exclusive statements to Asharq Al-Awsat, he said: “Our basic demand is the release of all prisoners and abductees without discrimination...”
He continued: “We have clear and frank directives from our political leadership regarding this, and that the government delegation deal with full responsibility and commitment to this humanitarian file.”
During the past years, the United Nations, in cooperation with the International Committee of the Red Cross, succeeded in completing two exchange deals between the two warring sides. More than a thousand persons were released in the first swap deal and around 900 in the second.
For his part, Abdul Qadir Al-Murtada, head of the Houthi delegation, expressed his hope that the round of consultations would be “successful, and that a new exchange deal would be agreed upon.”
He wrote on his X account: “We arrived in the Omani capital, Muscat, to attend a new round of negotiations on the prisoner file, under the auspices of the United Nations, and we hope that it will be successful and that a new exchange deal will be reached.”
In turn, the Presidential Leadership Council affirmed its keenness and support for the efforts and endeavors aimed at ending the suffering of detainees, kidnapped and disappeared persons.