Lebanese banks re-open for first time in two weeks

Lebanese banks opened to customers
on Friday for the first time in two weeks, following a wave of protests that
led the prime minister to resign.
Queues of up to 20 people formed
outside at least three banks in the capital, Beirut, as doors opened, Reuters
witnesses said. Smaller numbers were observed at other branches.
“There is not a lot of panic. I
thought it was going to be more,” said a customer who was holding a ticket
showing he was 17th in line outside a branch of Byblos Bank in Zouk Mosbeh,
north of Beirut, where about 20 people were waiting.
Two weeks of political turmoil and
the worst economic crisis since the 1975-90 civil war had fueled concern savers
would rush to withdraw funds or transfer them abroad once banks re-open.
The central bank had promised not to
impose capital controls when banks re-opened, measures that could hamper the
currency inflows and investment Lebanon badly needs to weather its economic
crisis.
There may be no formal capital
controls, but banking sources said on Thursday that commercial banks would try
to restrict transfers abroad to cases such as loan payments, medical expenses
and family support.
A customer at one Beirut bank was
told a letter would be needed from an overseas bank for a mortgage payment to
be transferred abroad. A bank employee was overheard offering higher interest
rates to another customer.
At a branch of Blom Bank, one of
Lebanon’s biggest banks, in Beirut’s Hamra Street, around 10 customers entered
the bank as its doors opened after 8 am, a Reuters witness said. The number
then grew to 20.
As banks opened in the Sodeco
district of the capital, around 20 people were queuing outside both a branch of
Frasnsabank and a branch of Bank Audi, a Reuters witness said.
A nearby branch of Blom had no queue
outside and a few customers inside. At a nearby Bankmed, around 10 people were
waiting in the branch but there was no queue outside.