
Karim Souaid named central bank governor
Karim Souaid was named as Lebanon's new central bank governor on Thursday, receiving 17 out of 24 votes in Cabinet, after Prime Minister Nawaf Salam's opposition to his appointment prevented consensus over the move.
According to Al-Jadeed TV, Souaid received the votes of the ministers of the Lebanese Forces, Hezbollah, the Amal Movement, the Progressive Socialist Party and the Kataeb Party, in addition to the ministers who are close to President Joseph Aoun.
Salam, Deputy PM Tarek Mitri, Culture Minister Ghassan Salameh, Social Affairs Minister Hanine al-Sayyed, State Minister for Administrative Development Fadi Makki, Economy Minister Amer al-Bssat and Education Minister Rima Karami meanwhile abstained from voting, MTV said, adding that Interior Minister Ahmad al-Hajjar voted for Souaid.
Aoun and Salam had failed to reach a consensus over a candidate according to reports, despite holding a meeting prior to the session.
'The meeting between President Aoun and PM Salam did not lead to consensus over the appointment of a central bank governor and the president is insisting on putting the file to a vote in Cabinet,' Al-Jadeed said.
Al-Akhbar newspaper reported earlier on Thursday that Salam had threatened to take an 'escalatory step' or even 'resign' should the matter be put to a vote in Cabinet.
But ministerial sources told the daily that resignation is out of the question and that Salam only threatened it to 'prevent Aoun from taking unilateral decisions that disregard the premier's opinion.'
'Tensions had surged after the PM sensed that the chances of Souaid are high domestically and externally, knowing that local parties had launched a campaign against him over the past two weeks, accusing him that he is the candidate of banks and that he rejects any agreement with the International Monetary Fund,' Al-Akhbar said.
Media reports also said that he 'lacks foreign support, specifically U.S. support, which was expressed by U.S. ambassador to Beirut Lisa Johnson to Finance Minister Yassine Jaber, when she called Jihad Azour a wonderful choice.'
Born in 1964, Souaid officially takes over after embattled former chief Riad Salameh's term expired in July 2023 with no designated successor.
Divided politicians have since failed to agree on a permanent replacement for Salameh, who has been accused at home and abroad of financial crimes.
First vice-governor Wassim Manssouri had been acting head of the central bank, a post that is traditionally reserved for a Maronite Christian in Lebanon's sectarian power-sharing system of governorship.
Souaid is the founder and managing partner at Gulf-based Growthgate, according to his biography on the private investment firm's website.
It says he previously worked at financial establishments, including HSBC Bank, and has been involved in privatization initiatives in a number of Arab countries.
He studied law at Lebanon's St. Joseph University and at Harvard Law School in the United States, according to the biography.
He has also worked as a corporate finance attorney in New York, and is a member of the New York State Bar Association, it says.
Some local media have reported that Souaid is close to the banking sector and members of Lebanon's entrenched ruling class.
Lebanon's new authorities need to carry out reforms demanded by the international community to unlock bailout funds.
The economic crash since 2019 has seen the local currency lose most of its value against the dollar and pushed much of the population into poverty, with people locked out of their savings.
In April 2022, Lebanon and the IMF reached a conditional agreement on a $ 3-billion loan package, but painful reforms that the 46-month financing program would require have not been undertaken.
Earlier this month, the IMF welcomed the new Lebanese government's request for support in addressing the country's severe economic challenges.
In February, it said it was open to a new loan agreement with the country following discussions with its recently appointed finance minister.
Beirut-based think tank the Policy Initiative in a statement Wednesday, said that the nomination of central bank chief would 'test the new government's commitment to genuine reform.'
'The next governor will shape Lebanon's urgent reform agenda, serve as the main counterpart to the International Monetary Fund, and directly engage in sovereign debt restructuring negotiations' alongside the finance ministry, it said.
The central bank governor in Lebanon is named by cabinet decree for a six-year mandate that can be renewed multiple times, based on the finance minister's recommendation.
Depositors' rights
PM Salam announced Thursday that he did not support the appointment of Karim Souaid as central bank chief for 'a host of reasons,' including 'keenness on protecting depositors' rights and preserving the state's assets.'
'I voiced reservations over his appointment, along with a number of ministers,' Salam said after a Cabinet session in which Souaid received 17 votes out of 24.
'Any governor must abide by the financial policy of our reformist government as expressed by the ministerial statement, in terms of negotiating on a new program with the International Monetary Fund, restructuring banks, and devising a complete plan according to the best international standards to preserve depositors' rights,' Salam added.
He also said that the government has approved a draft law aimed at amending the banking secrecy law.
'This is our policy, and the governor must abide by it. The Lebanese have asked us for reform, and we insist on reform,' Salam went on to say.
AFP
Hashtags

Try Our AI Features
Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:
Comments
No comments yet...
Related Articles


Nahar Net
2 hours ago
- Nahar Net
Report: Handover of Palestinian arms to begin from south Lebanon
by Naharnet Newsdesk 16 June 2025, 16:57 The major developments in the region, especially the Israeli-Iranian war, have reshuffled all cards in Lebanon and frozen the discussion of a number of files, most notably the handover of Palestinian weapons present in refugee camps, a process that was supposed to begin Monday from Beirut's camps, a media report said. Official sources told Asharq al-Awsat newspaper that the relevant Palestinian sides in Lebanon are yet to be informed of any instructions, whether from the leadership in Ramallah or from Lebanese security agencies, regarding the handover of weapons present in any camp during the coming days. 'This does not mean freezing the file, but rather waiting for resolving some internal Palestinian issues that are being addressed,' the sources said. 'The factions requested a grace period before the start of the handover of weapons from Beirut's camps, and it has been agreed to begin from the South's camps that fall within U.N. Resolution 1701's area of operations,' the sources added. 'The handover will begin from the Tyre region where the al-Bass camp is located and the al-Rashidiyeh and al-Burj al-Shamali camps will follow,' the sources explained, noting that 'execution will take place over stages and without specific deadlines.' And according to Lebanese sources, Azzam al-Ahmad, the Fatah Movement official in charge of the Lebanese file, will return to Lebanon over the next days at the head of a security delegation to continue discussed the handover mechanisms and the rest of the details. Al-Ahmad had spent days in Lebanon prior to Eid al-Adha in a bid to resolve some disputes within the Fatah Movement over this file. He also held talks with Lebanese security agencies and state authorities.


Nahar Net
2 hours ago
- Nahar Net
US envoy to Syria due in Beirut Wednesday
by Naharnet Newsdesk 16 June 2025, 15:56 The U.S. has warned Lebanon against taking part in the ongoing Iran-Israel conflict, a local media report said. The report published Monday in al-Binaa newspaper said that Israel would respond harshly to any missile launched from Lebanon and that the Lebanese army is working to prevent any attack from Lebanon. Meanwhile, U.S. ambassador to Turkey and special envoy to Syria Tom Barrack is due in Beirut Wednesday to meet with Lebanese officials over Hezbollah's weapons and the disputed Israeli-occupied Shebaa Farms.


MTV Lebanon
3 hours ago
- MTV Lebanon
16 Jun 2025 17:15 PM US Supreme Court rejects bid to revive copyright suit over Ed Sheeran hit 'Thinking Out Loud'
The U.S. Supreme Court turned away on Monday a bid to revive a copyright infringement lawsuit accusing pop star Ed Sheeran of unlawfully copying from the late singer Marvin Gaye's 1973 classic "Let's Get It On" in his 2014 hit song "Thinking Out Loud." The justices declined to hear an appeal by Structured Asset Sales, a company owned by investment banker David Pullman that has a copyright interest in Gaye's song, of a judge's decision to dismiss the case. The company had sued Sheeran, his record label Warner Music (WMG.O), opens new tab and music publisher Sony Music Publishing (6758.T), opens new tab, seeking monetary damages over alleged similarities between the two songs. Gaye, who died in 1984, collaborated with singer-songwriter Ed Townsend, who died in 2003, to write "Let's Get It On," which topped the Billboard charts. Sheeran's "Thinking Out Loud" peaked at No. 2 on the Billboard Hot 100 in 2015. Structured Asset Sales owns a share of the rights to "Let's Get It On" that previously belonged to Townsend. Its lawsuit accused Sheeran of misusing copyrighted elements of "Let's Get It On" including its melody, harmony and rhythm. U.S. District Judge Louis Stanton decided in 2023 that the musical elements that Sheeran was accused of copying were too common to merit copyright protection. The New York-based 2nd U.S. Circuit Court of Appeals upheld the decision last year. The 2nd Circuit also rejected the Structured Asset Sales argument that Stanton should have considered elements of "Let's Get It On" that were not found in the "deposit copy" of the song's sheet music submitted to the U.S. Copyright Office. In a 2023 trial in a separate copyright lawsuit over the same issue filed by Townsend's heirs, a jury in Manhattan federal court ruled in favor of Sheeran. "It's devastating to be accused of stealing someone else's song when we've put so much work into our livelihoods," Sheeran said outside the courthouse following that verdict. Structured Asset Sales has filed another lawsuit against Sheeran based on its rights to the audio recording of "Let's Get It On." That case is currently on hold.