Gulf Today

Lebanon MP frees $8,500, ends sit-in at bank

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BEIRUT: Lebanese lawmaker Cynthia Zarazir ended a protest at a bank on Wednesday ater obtaining the funds she needed from her frozen savings to pay for surgery, her lawyer said, in the latest in a series of stand-offs between individual­s and lenders.

Zarazir, who was elected in May to represent Beirut, entered the Antelias branch of Byblos Bank unarmed on Wednesday morning with two lawyers, and staged a sit-in for four hours as a ‘last resort’ to access her money her lawyer said.

Fouad Debs, one of the lawyers, confirmed to Reuters that Zarazir got access to the $8,500 she needed.

“We’ve spent a few days going back and forth to the bank and bringing my (medical) reports and they don’t answer us. I can’t delay this any more. I came to take my money,” Zarazir said.

“I came as a regular citizen, not as an MP,” she added. A spokespers­on for Byblos Bank was not immediatel­y available for comment.

Zarazir’s sit-in coincided with a separate hold-up in a suburb of Beirut, where a man identified as Hussein Shukr demanded $48,000 from his account.

“I’ll stay here forever - a day, two days, three days. I want my right,” said Shukr in a video published by the Depositors’ Outcry Associatio­n, an advocacy group.

Depositors’ Outcry also organised a protest outside Lebanon’s Central Bank, where dozens of protesters briefly lit tyres and tossed botles over metal barricades at the building.

Further north in the town of Jbeil, an unidentifi­ed assailant fired shots at a Beirut Bank branch on Wednesday and then fled, a security source said. There were no injuries.

The tensions on Wednesday came ater four hold-ups across the country the previous day, two of them involving armed men demanding their deposits. Another incident took place on Monday.

Lebanon’s banking associatio­n has expressed outrage over the hold-ups. A similar spree last month prompted banks to close for about a week.

The Depositors’ Outcry Associatio­n on Wednesday threatened more hold-ups.

“Either find a solution to the issue of depositors and start paying a portion of the deposits without a haircut, or we continue our open war against you, thieves,” it said in a statement.

Cases of bank hold-ups and protests have snowballed across Lebanon recently as depositors have grown exasperate­d over informal capital controls that banks have imposed since an economic downturn began in 2019.

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Cynthia Zarazir stands inside a bank in Antelias on Wednesday.
Reuters ± Cynthia Zarazir stands inside a bank in Antelias on Wednesday.

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