Lebanese Judge Imposes Travel Ban on Central Bank Governor Amid Probe
BEIRUT -A Lebanese judge said on Tuesday she had imposed a
travel ban on central bank governor Riad Salameh, who is at the centre of
investigations into alleged fraud and other misconduct launched after Lebanon
was plunged into a deep financial crisis.
Salameh, who said he had no knowledge of the ban and denied
any wrongdoing, is being probed by the authorities in Lebanon and at least four
European countries, including a Swiss inquiry over alleged money laundering.
Salameh, who has been governor for almost three decades, has
stayed in his post even as the economy has been crushed by a mountain of debt,
the currency has collapsed and swathes of the nation have been driven into
poverty.
Judge Ghada Aoun told Reuters she had imposed the ban as
part of a Lebanese investigation she was leading into Salameh's conduct and
said the next step would be to seek to question him.
When asked about allegations ranging from fraud to abuse of
public funds being investigated in the Lebanese probe, Salameh said:
"These cases raised against me personally are part of the campaign to fool
the public opinion."
"All the actions of the central bank are executed
according to the law of money and credit and thus are not the actions of one
person that takes decisions by himself," he told Reuters.
A judicial source said Aoun's probe included investigating
alleged fraud and complaints about the governor's actions by depositors, who
have been locked out of savings held by Lebanese banks.
The investigation also included looking at the central
bank's "financial engineering" operations, a range of mechanisms that
amounted to offering banks lavish returns over several years to attract dollars
into Lebanon, the source said.
The Lebanese judge was also probing the renting of a Paris
apartment by the central bank as a back-up server room for a decade at what was
considered an inflated rate, the source said.
Comments
Post a Comment