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Lebanon prosecutor seeks freeze of central bank chief’s overseas assets

Lebanon’s top prosecutor has sought to freeze European bank accounts belonging to central bank chief Riad Salameh, a senior judicial source said, days after five European states seized assets related to embezzlement probes.
Salameh is facing investigations in Lebanon and at least five European countries into the alleged embezzlement of some $330 million in public funds with the help of his brother, Raja – charges they have both denied.
Europe’s criminal justice coordination body on Monday announced that 120 million euros of Lebanese assets had been frozen in France, Germany, Luxembourg, Monaco and Belgium linked to an embezzlement investigation.
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German prosecutors said the move was tied to probes into Salameh.
The senior judicial source confirmed to Reuters that Public Prosecutor Ghassan Oueidat on Wednesday sent a letter to Lebanon’s Justice Ministry informing them he had requested the freezing of assets belonging to Salameh and his associates in Swiss, French, Belgian, German and Luxembourg banks.
The source said the letter came as part Salameh’s prosecution for embezzlement of public funds, tax evasion and money laundering, but did not specify whether it was in relation to the Lebanese or foreign probes into the governor.
Since Lebanon’s financial collapse began in 2019, Riad Salameh has faced increasing scrutiny of his nearly three decades as the head of the Banque du Liban (BDL).
He says his personal wealth was acquired during his time as a banker before he became governor and has said the probes against him are politically motivated.
He was charged last week with illicit enrichment days after his brother was arrested and charged with helping the governor launder the proceeds of ill-gotten gains in a case relating to the purchase and rental of Paris apartments, including to BDL.
Both deny the charges.
Helena Iskandar, head of the Justice Ministry Cases Authority to which Oueidat’s letter was sent, said she had twice since January 17 asked the finance minister to help her appoint lawyers abroad to freeze funds of the governor and his associates but had no response.
“If we don't do this, then the states prosecuting the governor could potentially appropriate these funds. We see that, should the allegations against him be proven correct, these funds are the right of the Lebanese state and should be repatriated,” Iskandar told Reuters.
A finance ministry spokesperson declined to comment. Finance Minister Youssef Khalil spent nearly four decades at the central bank – three under Salameh – before his appointment last year.
Oueidat did not respond to a request for comment on whether his move to freeze the assets was based on Lebanese evidence in the probe into Salameh, or an attempt to pre-empt seizure of the the assets by European authorities.
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