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Reuters
Reuters
Business
By Maya Gebeily

Lebanese lawmaker leaves bank with savings for surgery after protest

Cynthia Zarazir, a member of the Lebanese parliament who entered a Byblos bank branch seeking her own savings, according to a depositors' advocacy group, stands inside a bank in Antelias, Lebanon October 5, 2022. REUTERS/Mohamed Azakir

Lebanese lawmaker Cynthia Zarazir ended a protest at a bank on Wednesday after 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.

Cynthia Zarazir, a member of the Lebanese parliament looks at a woman as she entered a Byblos bank branch seeking her own savings according to a depositors' advocacy group in Antelias, Lebanon October 5, 2022. REUTERS/Mohamed Azakir

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

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.

Depositors can only withdraw limited amounts in U.S. dollars or the Lebanese pound, which has lost more than 95% of its value since the crisis began.

Cynthia Zarazir, a member of the Lebanese parliament gestures as she entered a Byblos bank branch seeking her own savings according to a depositors' advocacy group in Antelias, Lebanon October 5, 2022. REUTERS/Mohamed Azakir

Most withdrawals of foreign currency are carried out at an exchange rate unfavourable to depositors, amounting to a roughly 80% haircut on their value.

"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.

Cynthia Zarazir, a member of the Lebanese parliament uses her phone as she entered a Byblos bank branch seeking her own savings according to a depositors' advocacy group, in Antelias Lebanon October 5, 2022. REUTERS/Mohamed Azakir

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.

People stand outside a Byblos bank branch in Antelias, Lebanon October 5, 2022. REUTERS/Mohamed Azakir

Depositors' Outcry also organised a protest outside Lebanon's Central Bank, where dozens of protesters briefly lit tyres and tossed bottles 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 after 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.

(Reporting by Maya Gebeily; Editing by Andrew Heavens, Gerry Doyle, Alexandra Hudson)

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