Prof. Jassem AJAKA
Physicist and Economist

US anti-laundering measures cause worry in Lebanon

Shadi Alaa Eddine

Beirut – The annual report by the investigative board of Lebanon’s Central Bank revealed that 470 cases of money laundering were recorded last year, with 7

Economic expert Jassem Ajaka said money-laundering cases re­vealed by the Central Bank’s inves­tigation fit the definition of targeted cases by the American anti-Hezbol­lah sanctions. He said the sanctions consider injecting laundered money into the Lebanese banking system, violations that must be stopped. He also said that most likely the major­ity of those being pursued by the Lebanese investigative board were already on American sanctions list. Analyses of the situation in Leb­anon favoured the view that the United States would not push for the maximum application of the law, given the political situation in Lebanon and the country’s current difficulties. Ajaka, however, said the Americans “do not care about the likely impact of the sanctions on Lebanon and clearly favour a firm and rigorous approach to the matter.” “Any bank suspected by the Unit­ed States will face an uncertain fu­ture and no one in Lebanon or from outside Lebanon can do anything to save it,” Ajaka said. He pointed out that the United States has imposed sanctions on international heavyweights such as Russia. So, “does anyone really ex­pect the United States to be scared of Lebanon, for example?” Ajaka asked. He said the current anxiety-filled atmosphere in Lebanon will lead to Lebanese Central Bank Governor Riad Salameh, being reappointed, given his high credibility with the United States. Salameh seems to be the only one capable of managing the crisis and steering out of it with minimum damage. Ajax said the sanctions hastened the process of reaching a political consensus for another term for Salameh as central bank gover­nor. Salameh has left it up to individ­ual banks to appraise their internal situations and decide on their own whether they needed to close cer­tain accounts regarding last year’s sanctions. Ajaka said Salameh will take a different approach this year, with the Central Bank intervening directly in suspicious accounts and transactions. Economist Ghaleb Bou Mosleh said he believes the United States is using the subject of money launder­ing to apply political pressure and blackmail since the biggest money-laundering hubs are in New York and London. He explained that targeting Leba­nese banks is overdoing it because most Lebanese banks “are actu­ally managing the spoliation of the country’s wealth for the benefit of the Americans. Most investment capitals are foreign so it’s really not possible that the United States will dare punish the Lebanese banking sector that hosts its investments and fortune.” Bou Mosleh added that Washing­ton was keen on protecting the Leb­anese economy and would not push for its destruction as some alarm­ist analyses suggested. Destroying the Lebanese economy “entails the downfall of the entire political class in Lebanon which happens to be in control of all the economic tools in the country and which is natu­rally gravitating around the United States,” Bou Mosleh added.

Source The Arab Weekly  

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