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Lebanon's public prosecutor opens probe into central bank governor

Swiss legal request alleges $300m was embezzled from the bank through a company owned by Riad Salameh's brother
Riad Salameh, who denies any wrongdoing, had no comment when asked about the opening of the investigation (AFP)

Lebanon's public prosecutor has launched an investigation into central bank governor Riad Salameh, a judicial source has said, after a Swiss legal request alleged that more than $300m had been embezzled from the bank through a company owned by his brother.

The senior judicial source told Reuters the offices of Salameh's younger brother Raja had been sealed off, with computers and files confiscated in the course of the investigation. The public prosecutor had no comment.

Riad Salameh, who denies any wrongdoing, had no comment when asked by Reuters about the opening of the investigation, the sealing of his brother's office and the confiscation of the files.

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The central bank also declined to comment, or to provide contact details for Raja Salameh, and Reuters was not immediately able to ask him for comment.

The Swiss attorney general's office said in January that it had requested legal assistance from Lebanon in investigating "aggravated money laundering" and possible embezzlement relating to the Lebanese central bank, the Banque du Liban.

The Swiss request, seen by Reuters, alleges that Forry Associates, a company owned by Raja Salameh with a bank account in Switzerland that took commission on sales of Lebanese eurobonds and Treasury bills, was paid $326m by the central bank between 2002 and 2014 in transactions labelled as fees and commissions.

Most of the payments to Forry were then transferred to an account in Raja Salameh's name.

More than $7m were also transferred from Forry Associates between 2008 and 2012 to an account in Riad Salameh's name, the document said. Reuters was unable to find any contact details for Forry Associates.

'Fabrications'

The Swiss attorney general's office had no comment about the content of the legal request other than repeating its statement from January. It has not said whether Riad Salameh is a suspect.

A Lebanese government official told Reuters in January that Swiss authorities were investigating money transfers by Riad Salameh and also looking into his brother and assistant. 

Salameh said any allegations about such transfers were "fabrications".

The central bank governor said in a statement to the public prosecutor in January that he had answered questions sent on behalf of the Swiss and "asserted to him that any transfers were not made from the Lebanese central bank's accounts".

Lebanese prosecutor Ghassan Oueidat sent initial findings to Swiss authorities in February, state media said.

No further details about the case have been officially announced by Swiss authorities since then.

French measures

Lebanon's crippled banking system is at the heart of a financial crisis that erupted in late 2019. Banks have since blocked most transfers abroad and cut access to deposits as dollars grew scarce.

The meltdown has crashed the currency, prompted a sovereign default and doomed at least half the population to poverty.

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The Swiss investigation is one of several under way or being planned in Europe that target officials in Lebanon's financial sector and its broader political class.

France said on Thursday that it had started putting in measures to limit some Lebanese officials from entering the country on the grounds that they were blocking efforts to find a solution to the political and economic crisis.

Paris has spearheaded international efforts to aid Lebanon, but after eight months has failed so far to persuade squabbling politicians to adopt a reform roadmap or form a new government to unlock international aid.

With the European Union, Paris has been working on creating a sanctions regime for Lebanon that could ultimately see asset freezes and travel bans, Reuters reported.

"On a national basis, we have started to implement restrictive measures in terms of access to French territory against personalities involved in the current political blockage, or involved in corruption," Jean-Yves Le Drian, France's foreign minister, said in remarks alongside his Maltese counterpart.

Le Drian gave no names and it was not clear if the actual measures were already in place.

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