Current:Home > MyPeople in Lebanon are robbing banks and staging sit-ins to access their own savings -Ascend Wealth Education
People in Lebanon are robbing banks and staging sit-ins to access their own savings
View
Date:2025-04-14 06:10:40
TRIPOLI, Lebanon — On a recent weekday in Lebanon's second-largest city, the atmosphere at a branch of the IBL Bank is tense. Security and police are gathered outside. Soldiers are clutching M16 rifles. People are crowding the entrance.
Inside, Zahra Khaled, a 53-year-old in a wheelchair who's in urgent need of medical care, is refusing to leave until she is given her savings. The bank has frozen all of it — tens of thousands of dollars. After selling personal possessions and exhausting all other options, she and her adult daughter have now entered the bank and will not budge.
Lebanon's banks froze most accounts three years ago amid an economic collapse. This year, faced with increasingly desperate circumstances, more people are resorting to extreme measures to access their savings. Khaled's protest is one of the milder tactics. Other Lebanese have taken to robbing banks for their own funds, brandishing real or toy guns. Most take only what they are owed, and so far no one has been reported killed in a robbery.
At the IBL Bank, Khaled has the backing of her own relatives and other depositors. "I'm here to support her to get her savings," says Mahmoud al Khattib, a retired soldier whose bank account is also frozen. "The stink of this corrupt system has affected us all."
The World Bank says Lebanon's leaders spent decades running the country's economy like a Ponzi scheme. According to its investigation, politicians and their financiers hollowed out public services to enrich themselves and those around them. When the economy collapsed in 2019, the report says, Lebanon's bank owners should have assumed the losses. Instead they froze depositors' accounts.
Since then, the country's politicians and heads of financial institutions have resisted implementing economic reforms — such as laws on money laundering — that would unlock funding from the International Monetary Fund. Critics say one of the reasons for this is because leaving the laws vague has allowed politically well-connected Lebanese to get their money out of the country.
Meanwhile, more than 80% of the population lives in poverty, including Khaled's family.
Khaled negotiates with the staff at her bank branch for hours. But eventually the cashiers and managers leave, and police escort her and her family out, empty-handed.
"The bank brought the cops on us. We're only asking for our rights," her son Ismail Mohammed, 32, shouts, gripping the handles of his mother's wheelchair. "You've left us to starve."
"May God smite our leaders," his mother cries.
Khaled lives with her sister in a large apartment with high ceilings and brightly colored traditional Lebanese floor tiles. But it's so empty now that their voices echo in the rooms. Khaled has sold her furniture, piece by piece, just to get by. A small coffee table in the living room is piled with cans and vegetables they'd emptied from the kitchen fridge before selling it too.
Ismail Mohammed shows NPR bank statements indicating the family has close to $90,000 in their account. Part of this is money is from a house he and his mother sold just before the banks froze depositors' accounts.
In the economic collapse, Mohammed lost his job. The Lebanese lira has lost almost 90% of its value since October 2019, and inflation has soared. Now, the family's debts are piling up.
"It's humiliating," Mohammed says. "We're even forced now to take produce from the grocer's on credit. I can't bring myself to look the greengrocer in the eye."
Khaled's daughter Amina Mohammed, 35, says she and her husband and their three children will be evicted by the end of December if they cannot pay their rent. She's also worried for her mother's health. Khaled has already lost her right leg to diabetes. Now she has pains in her left leg and doctors have told her she needs an MRI scan and possibly surgery — all things she cannot pay for.
"When your mother needs medicine and you have money you can't access — what do you do?" says Amina, shaking with rage. "What choice do you have?"
Several days after their visit to the bank, Zahra Khaled's family tells NPR that the bank has agreed to give them some of their savings so she can pay for medical care. Some banks do sometimes release funds for individual depositors on compassionate grounds. But overall, for now, there's no solution and most depositors question if they will ever see their money again.
Kamel Wazni of the Lebanese Control Commission, which supervises the country's banking sector, can't rule out that some of the depositors' money might be gone for good. Billions of Lebanon's dollar reserves have been taken out of the country, and billions more have been spent on subsidies and seeking to respond to the economic collapse.
Banks do allow withdrawals of $400 per account per month, plus some Lebanese currency, in a strategy that he says will repay as many as 70% of depositors.
But this does little to help those who need larger and more immediate sums. So depositors have started coordinating their actions, even forming a movement.
"A depositor gets into the bank; we are outside," says Ibrahim Abdallah, a spokesperson for a group called Cry of the Depositors, recalling a bank heist.
He says the crowd cheers the robber on: "We're like: 'Yeah! Do it. Come on!' We're giving them some motivation."
The group has lawyers — they too include depositors locked out of their savings — who sometimes offer legal advice to those staging heists on how to protect themselves from prosecution.
Abdallah says he knows these robberies to "liberate" deposits are not right.
"The normal process [if you've been wronged] is to go through the legal route." But in Lebanon, he says, the legal route is blocked by corrupt judges.
The country's leaders, he says, "are forcing the depositors to become criminals."
At a protest by Cry of the Depositors outside a hotel in downtown Beirut where bankers gathered for a conference, Abdallah points to a nearby glass-paneled skyscraper whose many apartments he helped sell through his work in real estate.
"I have millions in the bank. Millions," he says. "My son sometimes says, 'Let's go have dinner.' I can't afford to have a dinner."
veryGood! (8)
Related
- Justice Department, Louisville reach deal after probe prompted by Breonna Taylor killing
- With Oklahoma out of the mix, here's how Florida gymnastics can finally win it all
- NHL Stanley Cup playoffs schedule 2024: Dates, times, TV for first round of bracket
- Read Taylor Swift and Stevie Nicks' prologue, epilogue to 'The Tortured Poets Department'
- Buckingham Palace staff under investigation for 'bar brawl'
- Lionel Messi is healthy again. Inter Miami plans to keep him that way for Copa América 2024
- 47 pounds of meth found in ice chest full of dead fish as car tries to cross US border
- Buying stocks for the first time? How to navigate the market for first-time investors.
- Nevada attorney general revives 2020 fake electors case
- Orlando Bloom says Katy Perry 'demands that I evolve' as a person: 'I wouldn't change it'
Ranking
- Small twin
- 'American Idol' alum Mandisa dies at 47, 'GMA' host Robin Roberts mourns loss
- FAA investigating after it says a flight told to cross a runway where another was starting takeoff
- 'Days of our Lives', 'General Hospital', 'The View': See the 2024 Daytime Emmy nominees
- Behind on your annual reading goal? Books under 200 pages to read before 2024 ends
- Sophie Kinsella, Shopaholic book series author, reveals aggressive brain cancer
- Wayfair set to open its first physical store. Here's where.
- Scientists trying to protect wildlife from extinction as climate change raises risk to species around the globe
Recommendation
Angelina Jolie nearly fainted making Maria Callas movie: 'My body wasn’t strong enough'
Buying stocks for the first time? How to navigate the market for first-time investors.
I’m an Editor Who Loves Fresh Scents & These Perfumes Will Make You Smell Clean and Light
Police called in to North Dakota state forensic examiner’s office before her firing
What do we know about the mysterious drones reported flying over New Jersey?
USA TODAY coupons: Hundreds of ways to save thousands of dollars each week
Torso and arm believed to be those of missing Milwaukee teen Sade Robinson wash up on beach along Lake Michigan
The Vermont Legislature Considers ‘Superfund’ Legislation to Compensate for Climate Change