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British Embassy in Lebanon 'deeply concerned' at bank account closures

Customers use an automated teller machine (ATM) outside an Audi Bank SAL bank branch in Beirut, Lebanon, on Wednesday, Oct. 30, 2019. Calls are mounting for Lebanon to impose formal restrictions on the movement of money to defend the countrys dollar peg and prevent a run on the banks when they open their doors on Friday after two weeks of nationwide protests. Photographer: Hasan Shaaban/Bloomberg via Getty Images

Customers use an ATM outside an Audi Bank SAL bank branch in Beirut, Lebanon, on Wednesday, Oct. 30, 2019. [Hasan Shaaban/Bloomberg via Getty Images]

The British Embassy in Beirut said on Friday it was “deeply concerned” by Lebanese banks closing accounts belonging to people who are nationals or residents of the United Kingdom, Reuters reports.

In a statement, the Embassy said “this unilateral action” by banks had singled out account holders on the basis of their British residency or nationality, in “what appears to be a targeted and discriminatory manner”.

The statement did not name any lenders in Lebanon’s crisis-hit banking sector, where more than $100 billion of hard currency savings remain stuck, with most depositors unable to access their funds.

A union for savers with funds stuck in Lebanese banks says that more than 50 British savers have been in touch because their accounts were unilaterally closed or they feared their closure, since a 28 February UK court ruling ordering two Lebanese banks to transfer funds to a UK client.

READ: Distraught Lebanese depositors fight for their life savings

The 28 February UK court order required Lebanon’s Bank Audi and its peer, SGBL, to transfer $4 million to a client, the first UK ruling obliging Lebanese banks to transfer dollars out of the banking system, raising the prospect of similar actions.

Lebanon’s financial system collapsed in 2019 under the weight of massive public debts caused by decades of corruption, waste and patronage by the government, which borrowed heavily from the Lebanese banks.

In the absence of any capital control law in Lebanon, banks began imposing informal restrictions on withdrawals and transfers abroad as the financial system collapsed in 2019.

These controls were never formalised with legislation and have been challenged in local and international courts, with mixed results.

Legal tussles between banks and depositors seeking their cash are also playing out in Lebanon.

And, in response, more banks have been closing accounts and issuing cheques for the balance without consulting clients, lawyers acting for depositors say.

British Ambassador, Ian Collard, urged “the Lebanese authorities to ensure that all depositors are properly and fairly treated, and he underlined the importance of Lebanese banks not discriminating against account holders on the basis of their British nationality or residency”.

In meetings with officials, including the Central Bank Governor and the Prime Minister, he “made clear his concerns about the treatment of British nationals and British resident depositors”, the statement said.

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