French Court Orders Lebanese Bank to Pay $2.8 Mln to Locked-Out Depositor

Mask-clad clients queue outside a bank in the Zalka suburb of Beirut, Lebanon. (AFP file photo)
Mask-clad clients queue outside a bank in the Zalka suburb of Beirut, Lebanon. (AFP file photo)
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French Court Orders Lebanese Bank to Pay $2.8 Mln to Locked-Out Depositor

Mask-clad clients queue outside a bank in the Zalka suburb of Beirut, Lebanon. (AFP file photo)
Mask-clad clients queue outside a bank in the Zalka suburb of Beirut, Lebanon. (AFP file photo)

A French court has ordered a Lebanese bank to pay $2.8 million to a client residing in France, in the first-known international ruling against informal capital controls imposed by Lebanese banks since 2019.

The Nov. 19 ruling, not yet published but seen by Reuters, orders Lebanon's Saradar Bank to pay the Syrian claimant all the funds she had deposited in two accounts at the bank in 2014.

Saradar Bank will appeal the judgment, "which results from a misapplication of the Lebanese law," the bank said in a written statement to Reuters.

Lebanon's financial system collapsed in 2019 after years of unsustainable financial policies, and banks imposed tight controls on accounts, including a de facto ban on withdrawals of dollar-denominated deposits and limits on withdrawals in the local currency.

These controls were never formalized with legislation and have been challenged in local and international courts by savers who have sought to gain back their money promptly in hard currency, rather than in the Lebanese pound which has lost more than 90% of its value in two years.

Attempts to formalize capital controls have repeatedly failed, including last week by a parliamentary committee amid opposition from groups representing depositors' rights, who said the draft legislation would immunize banks from prosecution while failing to secure people access to their money.

"This ruling means that Lebanese depositors clearly have recourse in international courts, and while every case is different from the other, it is an encouraging step for a number of claims spanning from Europe to the Gulf and US," lawyers for the depositor Nada Abdel Sater and Jacques-Alexandre Genet said in joint written remarks to Reuters.

They asked that the claimant's name be withheld over privacy concerns. Abdel Sater is representing several clients in similar cases spanning three continents and said British courts recently accepted three cases put forward by depositors against Lebanese banks.

Saradar had argued that the case brought in France should be reviewed by a Lebanese court, but the French court said it was competent because the claimant had been approached by employees of the bank and signed contracts in Paris and was a long-time resident of France.

Saradar had terminated her accounts and deposited the funds in cheques with a Beirut notary. The French ruling said that the unilateral move by the bank, opposed by the claimant, meant the bank had not fulfilled its obligations.

Due to the informal controls in Lebanon, cheques cannot be cashed out in dollars and are instead sold on the market at a discount of about three-quarters of the total price, meaning the claimant would have lost much of her money, had she accepted.

"As a result, the bank will be deemed to have failed to fulfill its obligation of restitution (of funds) incumbent upon it," and is ordered to make the payout, the ruling said.



Hamas Suspends Truce Talks Pending Appointment of New Political Leader

Khaled Meshaal (L) hugs Ismail Haniyeh before leaving the Gaza Strip. (Reuters file)
Khaled Meshaal (L) hugs Ismail Haniyeh before leaving the Gaza Strip. (Reuters file)
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Hamas Suspends Truce Talks Pending Appointment of New Political Leader

Khaled Meshaal (L) hugs Ismail Haniyeh before leaving the Gaza Strip. (Reuters file)
Khaled Meshaal (L) hugs Ismail Haniyeh before leaving the Gaza Strip. (Reuters file)

Sources in Hamas said that the Palestinian movement has temporarily frozen ceasefire talks in the Gaza Strip.

In remarks to Asharq Al-Awsat, the sources said that a decision was taken to suspend contacts until “choosing a successor to the head of the politburo, Ismail Haniyeh,” who was assassinated by Israel in Tehran on Wednesday.

The issue of Haniyeh’s successor is expected to be resolved within the next few days, the sources said.

According to the internal regulations of the Hamas movement, the deputy head of the political bureau replaces the president in the event of his absence, and if this is not possible, the head of the Shura Council becomes the caretaker until elections are held.

But the situation today is complicated, as Israel has assassinated, in separate operations, each of Haniyeh, his deputy, Saleh Al-Arouri, and the head of the Shura Council, Osama Al-Muzaini.

“In light of the current complex situation, the issue may be resolved within the framework of the Political Bureau,” the sources noted, suggesting that Khaled Meshaal, in his capacity as head of the movement abroad, could be chosen as head of the office or at least as director of its operation.

They added that Meshaal’s selection seems to be the most likely in light of the inability of the movement's head in Gaza, Yehya Sinwar, to assume any responsibilities at the present time.

An informed source told Asharq Al-Awsat that the appointment of a new politburo chief will lead to the immediate resumption of ceasefire negotiations, stressing that Hamas wanted to reach an agreement that will stop the war and bloodshed in Gaza.

The source confirmed that Haniyeh’s assassination “cast a shadow on the course of the talks, but will not disrupt them forever, because the movement does not deal with reactions, but rather with an open political mind and has a duty now to stop the war.”

Meanwhile, Israel dispatched to Cairo on Saturday a high-level delegation that included Mossad Director David Barnea and Shin Bet Chief Ronen Bar to hold talks with head of Egyptian Intelligence Abbas Kamel over the hostage agreement and ceasefire in Gaza.

They will also discuss security arrangements along the border between Egypt and Gaza and the reopening of the Rafah crossing.

Israeli media confirmed that the delegation was sent after intense American pressure on Israel in recent days to continue negotiations and reach an agreement.