Lebanon has hands on masks and hearts for fear of new pound collapse

  • 4/27/2020
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BEIRUT: As if the coronavirus disease (COVID-19) outbreak was not enough for Lebanon, the possible rise in the US dollar’s exchange rate against the Lebanese pound is adding to problems for those already facing severe economic hardship. The sliding pound will have a huge impact on the earnings of average Lebanese people. The exchange rate of the dollar on the black market on Sunday was 4,200 Lebanese pounds. The Lebanese Health Ministry has recorded three new COVID-19 cases, raising the total number of confirmed cases from Feb. 21 until Sunday to 707. No new deaths have been recorded, leaving the toll at 24. The Ministry of Interior is set to relax COVID-19 restrictions on Monday, but with certain precautions like wearing face masks now mandatory. The new procedures will allow factories, storage facilities for medical drugs and foodstuffs, supermarkets, minimarkets, sweet shops, patisseries, bakeries, restaurants, takeaway shops, hotels, serviced apartments, insurance offices, and libraries to work longer hours. People in vocational trades will be allowed to work, including carpenters, blacksmiths, plumbers, seamstresses and tailors, electricians, mechanics, upholsterers, goldsmiths and florists. Public transport and cargo vehicles will resume work from 5 a.m. to 9 p.m. Health Minister Hamad Hassan wrote on Twitter: “We are moving very carefully and cautiously on the right and disciplined path. We all abide by the general mobilization controls as the safe return journey takes effect.” Licensed moneychangers will resume work on Monday, having not done so since Thursday in protest of the “unjustified deterioration of the exchange rate.” This return coincides with the growing political tension toward the monetary policy of the governor of the Banque du Liban. The head of the Syndicate of Money Changers, Mahmoud Murad, told Arab News: “We are literally holding our breath on Monday because things are rapidly developing and heading in a very dangerous direction.” He added: “Things have got out of control. What is happening is not convincing at all. Some people are messing with the exchange market, and we know nothing about them except that they are controlling the exchange rate even from their houses.” Murad said: “We are waiting for the platform that the Banque du Liban promised us to know how to price the dollar, but we have not been informed of anything until now. There is an app on social media known as Lebanese Lira. We do not know its source, but it has been controlling the market for more than 3 months. This app has been shared by people since the dollar’s exchange rate was 1,600 liras. People have only been selling their dollars according to this app’s price. Someone is buying all the dollars on the market in an abnormal way.” Murad pointed out that he “filed a complaint in the court against this app, but no one has acted yet.” He explained that there were people working from their houses and delivering exchanged money after buying dollars. “This practice dissolves the capital of legitimate money changers,” he said. He added that dismissing the governor of the Banque du Liban, Riad Salamé, in light of the current political crisis was not the cure. He said the central bank must intervene strongly in the market by injecting $50 million to $100 million for the market price to stabilize. He said: “It is not enough to intervene using $5-$7 million a day, which happened last week for one day.” On Saturday night, a bomb was thrown at a Fransabank branch in Sidon, resulting in material damage. The bank’s security camera captured images of two suspects, according to preliminary investigations by the security services. The phrase “You are in danger” was sprayed outside several other banks in Sidon, prompting the security services to take measures to protect banks and the central bank’s branch there. The leader of the Free Patriotic Movement, Gebran Bassil, defended in a press conference on Sunday the government’s request to audit the central bank’s accounts. He held “thieving, corrupt, and greedy beneficiaries as well as bank owners, shareholders, and the central bank” responsible for the state’s financial losses. He defended himself by refuting charges of having “any property or money at home or abroad.” Attacks on Salamé were met with violent reactions from the opposition of Hassan Diab’s government. Maronite Patriarch Bechara Boutros Al-Rahi also rejected accusations leveled against the governor, blaming him for the slide in the value of the pound, and called for Salamé to be given the right to defend himself. Al-Rahi said: “It is totally unacceptable to target the dignity of the man and the institution that has not known such a thing since its establishment in the days of President Fuad Chehab.” Al-Rahi asked: “Who benefits from destabilizing the governorship of the Banque du Liban?It is part of a plan to change the face of Lebanon.”

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